Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) - Class of 1942 Page 1 of 408
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C tN CudLcr - j J fY R-IN-CHIEF ROBERT FRANK, BUSINESS MANAGER J 0. ■• 7 . wdL c Sf 7 4e AnJudui Jpsi 1942 INDIANA UNIVERSITY • • be icatian To you — the student body of Indiana University — in what you have done in campus life, in what you are doing for national defense, and in what you will do as the back- bone of a country in need of expert guidance during a try- ing period of wartime reconstruction. • tf-QX UMVld • Hoping to make this book more than a decoration on the family bookshelf, the members of the 1942 Arbutus staff have endeavored to capture the feelings experienced by you — the students — in this eventful year and to keep as memories for you the things you want to remember. • • • • I The Spirit of Youth Ten years have come and gone since April 2, 1917, when overnight the sons of Indiana were men. For me the horrors of death, disease, and degradation have faded dim away, leaving only mellow memories of friendship fine, or selflessness, or courage, and of man- liness till now my hate of war is tempered with a shin- ing hope that somehow men may join together once again, one for all, and all for one, in fellowship, think- ing, working, fighting for a better day. It was good and great to be alive with you at Indiana back in ' 17. Letter of James Adams, ' 21, to W. L. B., April, 1927 II The Unchanging Law Yes! to this thought I hold with firm persistence; The last result of wisdom stamps it true; He only earns his freedom and existence, Who daily conquers them anew. Goethe, Faust, Act V, Seen III In what Jim Adams and his fellows experienced of life and death five and twenty years ago and in what he wrote of it ten years after, there was and there is the ever-living, ever-conquering Spirit of Youth. In what the aged Goethe heard Faust say in his last hour, there is the never-changing Law of Victorious Life. May that Spirit under guidance of that Law now prevail. William Lowe Bryan President Emeritus lilt . ife THE UNIVERSITY at WAR r 1 0£5sam THE CHALLENGE- • SL- e,e S £ ' ' «  v,0,5 ' am V-VJVV fc 0 xNtWS December 7 — War has been declared against the United States. Not by words nor legal documents, but by bombs has war come to America. No longer is it undeclared war with all-out aid for everything short of man power. Now it is actual declared war calling for increased man power trained in the Army, Navy, and Marines. Many times have we lived through this moment in our imaginations — this moment when we would read glaring newspaper headlines telling us that our country was in war. But now it is real and we have read the screaming headlines. The campus has changed almost instantly. No longer is it the gay and jovial place it ordinarily is during the Sunday night supper hour. In- stead it has taken on a face of somber grey and a look of dread, coupled with extreme bewilderment and worry. The news is received with a quietness that is grim in its intensity. There are no demonstrations of any sort. Everywhere groups talk excitedly about the sudden turn of events and great is the speculation as to what effect it will have on the University. Almost unanimous is the idea that Japan is in for a sound whipping, and at times there is an air of fatalism or optimism. STUDENT WAR COUNCIL THE ANSWER Maybe we had imagined that when we read the headlines with these three life-shaking words, War Is Declared, we would scream and cry frantically. But no one does. Everyone is numb and somewhat sense- less. For the moment our world seems to be rocking and we do not know where to turn next. For some it is a moment filled with fear, despair, or a feeling of utter helplessness. Almost instantly the Commons is cleared. The Li- brary too is deserted. When we feel that our life foun- dations are beginning to totter, how can we study? How can we play? College is forgotten and lessons are ADMINISTRATIVE WAR COUNCIL neglected. The paramount thought is, Where do we go from here? On the campus tonight there is no an- swer and so we turn to radios and telephones in a futile effort to learn what path lies ahead of us now. In every organization house, in dormitories, and in boarding houses out in town, students group around radios listening to latest war bulletins. They crowd around the telephones to call home or to talk to friends in the Army. The entire atmosphere reflects our atti- tude. It is dark, melancholy, and pensive. There is no sleep or rest on the campus tonight. We are in war. Bi EftflW P MEjw ; r! $ 3 V The bombs that rocked Pearl Harbor rocked Indiana University as well and plunged it into another period of wartime turmoil. To prevent an educational black-out at the University, the quickly- formed Administrative War Council worked hard and rapidly to meet the challenge confronting Indiana University by setting a time minimum for an education maximum. The War Service Plan, providing an accelerated, flexible, and exten- sive program for meeting the present known emergencies as well as the unknown emergencies that inevitably will arise, was the direct result of the administrative efforts. To set the elaborate machine of the program into well-regulated op- eration, a Student War Council and an Alumni War Council were or- ganized to help the Administrative War Council guide the affairs of the University into the smoothest possible channels. Beginning with the second semester of the 1941-42 school year, the University went on a three-semester basis. Using Saturdays for class days, the normal number of lecture days was maintained, but only six were allotted for examinations, instead of the usual eight. Vacation periods, too, were cut to a minimum. Under this speeded up system, freshmen can complete a four-year college course in two and two-thirds years by attending school for all three terms, and upper classmen can receive their degrees much sooner than they would have under the old regime. The new demands of the nation for more trained men and women in an all-out effort against the aggressor countries, therefore, are being met in a shorter length of time. Of equal importance, however, in this accelerated program is the direct effect on the student. Class work nec- essarily is more difficult because course limits are condensed. Longer hours in the Library and less free time is curbing the number of extra- curricular activities in which the student can participate, and each is do- ing his part to make the most of the opportunities presented. Realizing that physical fitness is an absolute necessity in wartime, the new plan carries with it provisions for every undergraduate male student to pursue physical education courses each semester. This requirement, in answer to requests from Navy and Army officials who are aware that healthy and physically well-trained specimens are essential, was inaugu- rated several weeks after the beginning of the spring term. In addition, undergraduate women are required to enroll in a physical education class every semester, with the option of substituting approved defense courses during their junior and senior years. auy W®$0 $!!% r Although most men feel that their physical well-being is much more important in wartime than the health of the female of the species, since they will be doing the actual fighting, the numerous jobs on the home front which women are required to do are not for powder puff ladies. Only the strong are well qualified. A permanent part of the organization of the University which was in- troduced in connection with the War Service Plan, is the Junior Division, an innovation in university education, headed by Dean Wendell W. Wright. It is a division concerned primarily with the problems of first year students, their courses of study, and their guidance during the period when they are making the transition from high school to the Uni- versity. It will be the aim of this Division to provide for each student an educational program that will fit his own particular needs instead of attempting to fit him into one of a few definite courses of study. Its aim is to deal more adequately with old and new problems intensi- fied by war. Under its plan of operation, high school seniors have the best possible guidance for fitting themselves for a place in the world both during and after the war. Their capabilities are being discovered and developed in a college course mapped out for them which will achieve the maximum benefits. For students who find it necessary to go into Service before complet- ing college careers, the plan provides that a student ordered to report for military service after the completion of at least six and not more than ten weeks of a semester will receive credit to the extent of one-half of the hours for which he is enrolled, subject to his standing in each class at the time of leaving. If withdrawal for the same reason occurs after the completion of at least ten weeks of a semester, the student will receive full credit for his courses. Perhaps taking one ' s philosophy, ethics, or French grammar course in an accelerated manner may seem foolish to some students. They may feel that such things should be cut out and that only subjects vital to the actual guidance of the war effort itself should be included in a speeded up academic program. Army and Navy officials, as well as educators, agree, however, that this man ' s war needs mental fitness as well as strong bodies to carry it to its successful completion. A college man has a much better chance of coming back. Statistics prove that; so the skeptics had better think twice before doubting it. Mental fitness may sound rather vague, but the university man can think faster, adjust himself to new situations more rapidly, and has a sounder background upon which to base his decisions. i t iiaa tf-GCuttu Memhesti, -Awi AU Old QoJi PlufUcal 10 J • ■«• ' • H F k «ag3 w «k ■■ .vMfti tudenti Aatee, 7a Qa W Mental tytUeU 11 Id Mte fytUu tijtu, Students registered for the Selective Service February 1 6. Now all they have to do is wait for questionnaires. In honor of Russell Church, the first University war casualty, the R.O.T.C. stands at attention by the War Memorial. The Library offers a great deal of informati about duty to the United States. We have worked carefully. We are proud of the Indiana University War Service Plan. Our plan is not the first to be announced, but it is the most complete. In formulating it, we sought and received student opinions. We likewise made an exhaustive canvass of the plans of the other institutions. It allows maximum flexibility and acceleration. It more adequately meets the needs of the nation at this time of peril, and at the same time it is the most adaptable of all possible plans of individual student situations. With these words, President Herman B Wells introduced the major provisions of the University ' s new speed-up program to the student body at a special convocation on the night of January 19, 1942. He urged student co-operation and asked that the stu- dents take advantage of all of the Plan ' s benefits. Pointing out that the need for skilled persons in defense and military divisions make it vital for colleges to allow students to finish sooner than they did under old systems, the President said: Our society is faced with the necessity for a supreme military and productive effort. The type of training men and women re- ceive in college is needed in this effort. There is no shortage of man power. There is a tremendous shortage of trained man power. 12 Becamel Muriate ,- Minded Forming the symbol of Americanism, V for Victory, are coed sponsor Jo Anne Pierpont and an R.O.T.C. unit. Showing the students that the program was launched to conform with the direct request of the government, President Wells explained the idea of mental fitness and told about the new required physical education program. He announced the members of the Student War Council, appointed to assist the Administrative War Council, and concluded with this plea to the students: It will require intensification of effort on your part. Every American, regardless of his task, will be similarly affected. As you know, our school is one hundred twenty-two years old. The institution and its students have met victoriously the problems of every national crisis throughout that long period. Together we shall write another brilliant chapter in that long record. Although clearly showing the students that more study and longer hours of it are and will be required in the future, President Wells made it clear that the main idea of the program, was that college life should go on as near normal as possible. He urged that, despite extensive changes in schedule and curricula, campus even ' s should not be altered drastically. And so, even in dark hours, students sought typical Hoosier fun and laughter, and the only great change was a grim determination to win. 13 • Ai. We. Monk ana. Plau A i CAMPUS LIFE • ' ■y XL Manly duty Wonder what Dogwood is doin Mosmina Convo - post phys ed recreation from recreation I love you ? Smoke-up? Check! All night boresses are great — until morning 17 And the Arbutus staff is workinc And the Arbutus staff is working. 18 Obvious, isn ' t it? • ■■WEI _H Que ut aost A man ' s weakly washing Betcha ' can ' t find the clock in this one Trainer tightens tape 19 An Auditorium Series book would save this waiting in line. This COULD be a committee meeting Her date was at 7:45 Oft Mte How to study — a good and bad example And then he has to smife and say Thank You. ' 20 At last Commons dancing is a common sight. it h Zo hIhjg, A convertible is wonderful — until it rail And the Arbutus staff is working. Mind if we kibitz? Seventy- Five Years Ago Sarah Parke Morrison And so the modern coed flits gaily through her college life, fitting into her day ' s schedule a round of Joeing, classes, study, dates, hikes, and just everything. Contrast her day with that of the first coed on the University campus. Anyone want to trade places with her? In the first place, Sarah Parke Morrison, way back in 1867 (1942 marks the seventy-fifth an- niversary of co-education at Indiana) was ad- mitted by only the narrow margin of one vote when the Board of Trustees reviewed her petition to become a student. Although she had been bold enough to attempt such a drastic step, she was a little fearful of starting out alone because no other woman took advantage of the opportunity, and as she said, I had to go myself, after hoping all summer that some other woman also would go to school that fall. Sarah already had attended Mount Holyoke Seminary and had had some poetry printed in the Indianapolis Sentinel so she wasn ' t too far behind her fellow classmen when it came to previous edu- cation. Fortunately for Sarah, it was the custom to wear large sun hats with a broad ribbon going over the crown and tied under the chin. This sunbonnet really protected her from the violet rays — be- cause by wearing it she avoided the whistles and yells of such klever kids as those who now drape themselves on the steps of Maxwell Hall or in front of the Daily Student office. It ' s certainly too bad that Sarah couldn ' t have come to school in 1942, because j udging from the subjects she took and the things she did, her life must have been pretty dull. She took Greek, Latin and International Law, and was graduated in June, 1869. Three hundred men and a girl may sound fine to some coeds, but Sarah suffered from severe prejudice. The men called her a blue-stocking and refused to accept her as a fellow student, think- ing she couldn ' t possibly have the mental ability to get through college. Like all of the fair sex, however, she showed them what she could do, and to prove her worth, returned to the University to teach some classes and found many women students following in her footsteps, guided by her example. 22 R . . v. ,-.;.-: ' ' ••- ' - • First Row Second Row FRED CASE DONALD HASTY KEITH WILLIAM COX BILL E. HUBBARD HERB CRAMER DAN JENKINS CHARLES A. FEEGER PATRICK B. LARKIN FREDERICK GORDON ALBERT E. LESSER CHALMERS L. GOYERT TED LEWIS THOMAS C. HASBROOK HARRY B. LITTELL Third Row Fourth Row JOHN LYCAS EUGENE RODENBERGER GEORGE D. Mc DONALD GLEN H. SMITH JOHN PARKER MEISTER WILLIAM TORPHY MICKEY MILLER RICHARD VOLLRATH KENNETH MOELLER CHARLES R. WELLS JOE PINTER ANDREW M. ZIMMER PAUL RILEY mmmm . 24 ScoUmaAjcH and Blade. Young blades but active ones are the members of Scabbard and Blade, the honorary military fra- ternity which has taken its place among the vari- ous venerables of Indiana University. One of the older honoraries on the campus, the fraternity is a result of the increased interest in military science which was evidenced after World War I on numerous university campuses. Under the advisership of Major Cyrus R. Smith, the organiza- tion seeks to develop in its members the qualities of efficient officers, and to co-operate with the War Department in improving the training and development of university R.O.T.C. units. Those eligible for membership in the fraternity must be advanced military students and are re- quired to have a high scholastic average. In ad- dition, they must show a general fitness of mind, body, and character. New members are selected each year by the faculty members of the Depart- ment of Military Science and Tactics and by active Scabbard and Blade members. Founded at the University of Wisconsin in 1904, the functions of the organization are modeled after those of the United States Army. Company F of Indiana University was organized and in- stalled in 1920 at the first national convention. The organization, now made up of forty-three military masters, is active socially on campus as co-sponsor of the Band Benefit Ball — teaming with the University Band in that event, and they sponsor the Military Ball, a formal season high- light. One day each year is set aside as Scabbard and Blade day, and on that special date a Regi- mental Review honors the local chapter. CHALMERS L. GOYERT Captain CHARLES FEEGER 1 st Lieutenant JOSEPH PINTER 2nd Lieutenant KENNETH MOELLER 1 st Sergeant 25 P iMtiHXj, RiUeA, JOHN LYCAS Captain JAMES B. RICHARDS 1st Lieutenant GEORGE McDONALD 2nd Lieutenant ROBERT STUTSMAN 2nd Lieutenant THOMAS LEVI 1 st Sergeant Distinctive is the word to describe the Indiana University Pershing Rifle unit. The best drilled men on the campus, members of this organization do it up right, for to them precision marching is merely a breeze. However, it all takes plenty of practice, and the boys do not lag during the drills every Monday night and Thursday afternoon. The entire unit meets for a marching session of several hours at these times. Cherchez la femme can apply to this group too — for members of it selected Jo Anne Pier- pont for their coed sponsor for the current year. The organization was founded at the Univer- sity of Nebraska in 1 894 when Lieutenant John J. Pershing organized a competitive drill team from the army unit there. Although Black Jack was promoted, the unit thrived and when it enlarged during the ensuing years, it adopted the name of its famous founder. The Indiana University unit was established approximately eleven years ago. Spotlighting the marching year of the unit is the annual drill competition with other companies of the regiment. A crack squad was sent this year to the meet at Western Kentucky State Teachers College at Bowling Green on April 24 and 25. The Indiana University company was host at a regimental meeting conducted on the campus Feb- ruary 15 and 16. Representatives were present from all of the companies in the regiment. The Riflers, under the advisership of Lieutenant Charles L. Littell, annually assists in the presenta- tion of the Military Ball in February. More than one hundred drillers make up this year ' s unit. 26 f? HP £ £ c n resit Ji I V r JffiHi rt± (S r v First Row JOHN ALLMAN ROBERT BARNETT GEORGE BLAND ROBERT BOSSETT ELVIN NASH BRALLIER ROBERT D. BRANDT CHILTON BROWN WILLIAM I. CHAPEL WALLACE CHASTAIN KEITH WILLIAM COX Second Row JOHN ESPIE CLYDE FOX LOTUS H. FULTZ PAUL GILLIATT EARL GROSSMAN JULES HENDRICKS EBEN HENSON RICHARD P. HIATT BOB JACKSON VAN ZANDT JANEWAY, Jr. Third Row ARNOLD JOERS JOE KREUTZER MAURICE KENDALL ROBERT KIRK RICHARD LEWIS HARRY B. LITTELL MAX C. LOY JOHN LYCAS GUY McCLUNG THOMAS P. McCONNELL Fourth Row GEORGE D. McDONALD JAMES H. MclNTYRE DON MASON JOHN PARKER MEISTER BOB MIERS GEORGE W. MOHR BOB MOORE ROBERT G. MOORHEAD JOHN MURRAY JOSEPH MYSLIWIEC Fifrh Row JAMES A. NESBIT NORMAN A. NICOLAI STANLEY PATTON JAMES PIPER ROBERT PRUETT JAMES B. RICHARDS DeWAYNE ROYALTY ROBERT SMART ALEXANDER SOBIERALSKI JOHN SONNEVELD Sixth Row MARLOWE B. SORGE JACK STURGIS RICHARD THORNTON JOHN TORPHY RICHARD VORIPAIEFF WILLIAM WAYNE DONALD D. WHITE LEONARD FRANKLIN WHITE WARREN R. WIDMAN 27 MatohiHXf JluM ied When warm spring and autumn weather pervades the Indiana University campus, strains of martial airs can be heard daily echoing from Jordan Field. Day after day, rain or shine, the famous Marching Hundred, Indiana ' s noted marching band unit, practices the intri- cate formations and precision movements that have spread its fame throughout the entire United States. Under the able direction of Gerald L. Doty, the Band travels to several out-of-town football games in ad- dition to performing at all home games. Forming the outline of the state of Indiana at the Notre Dame stadium and at the Homecoming game last fall won numerous special acclaims from sports writers and fans alike. During the cold winter months, the Hundred keeps in trim by playing at all home basketball games, at pep sessions, and at numerous other University func- tions. The Band also marches at the campus military reviews and performs for the Federal R.O.T.C. inspec- tion. To raise special funds, the organization annually helps to sponsor the Band Benefit Ball. The Marching Hundred, actually numbering more than one hundred and thirty members, also received praise this year for its patriotic presentation of the air- liner and for depicting various famous figures. 28 First Row ROBERT BURRUSS JOHN CORBIN KENT DAWSON DELBERT DETMER CHARLES FINKBINER Second Row RICHARD LEWIS FISHER CECIL CHARLES FRANKLIN, Jr. ROBERT HANSON JOHN HELMS JAMES H. JORDAN Third Row RONALD LITTLE J. ROBERT PENCE BILL PLATT PAUL ROBERT PRESSLER JOHN REDMAN Fourth Row HERSCHEL ROCK JOHN R. SHERWOOD BOB SHIMEL GEORGE FORD VAUGHT ROBERT L. WINSLOW, Jr BUCK WOOLDRIDGE Kaiipxi Kafipja P i J. ROBERT PENCE President ROBERT L. WINSLOW Vice-President JOHN D. REDMAN Secretary ROBERT K. SHIMEL Treasurer Drilling and goose-stepping their way to fame, mem- bers of Kappa Kappa Psi, honorary band fraternity, are chosen from the ranks of the Marching Hundred — and the success of the Band is mute evidence of the group ' s activity. The organization strives to promote the inter- ests of the Band and to make a better marching unit each year. During the school year the fraternity sponsors vari- ous concerts. In addition, it assists other campus or- ganizations in presenting musical programs, thus adding to the already expanded cultural program planned and ■sponsored by the University administrators. Each fall musically inclined freshmen are invited to a Kappa Kappa Psi smoker to acquaint them with the members of the Band and to inspire them to help make the Marching Hundred a bigger and better institution. The social life of these musicians includes several picnics and banquets each year, as well as the Spring Swing, the group ' s annual dance. Co-operation and fellowship are among the fore- most aims of the fraternity. Another of its important functions, however, is to learn of the activities of other bands scattered throughout the country. Members are selected on the basis of attitude, ap- pearance, and playing and marching ability. 29 S ' (Left to right) Sonyo Schlee ese, Kothryn Langell, and Je r, Elsie Chalfant, Che irowning is not pictur Goyert, Je ?. 0. 7. G. Sfuotod u The ranks of Colonel, Lieutenant-Colonel, Major, and Captain apparently are not confined to the fighting unit of the Department of Military Science and Tactics, for it seems that even that manly division has found it necessary to inject a little beauty into the drill forma- tions. Proudly leading the military men in their Thurs- day afternoon reviews, the coed sponsors march on to put a little spice in the Lord Mayor ' s show. Girls wishing to lead the fight-in ' men of the Uni- versity make application to the Department, are inter- viewed by Colonel Raymond L. Shoemaker, head of the Department, and then are discussed and voted on by the students of advanced military. Of the many appli- cants, only seven are chosen as sponsors and they serve not only for regular reviews, but also for Federal inspection and as sponsors of various military groups. This year ' s lucky coeds were named as usual at the annual Military Ball in February, and were introduced to the students attending the formal dance. Sponsors chosen to serve this year and next were Sonya Schlee, Elsie Chalfant, Kathryn Langell, Jeanne Reese, Joan Browning, Lorraine Holsinger, and Jean Pierson. 30 First Row: Paul Gilliatt, George Mohr, Dick Lewi Second Row: Staff Sergeant Howe, ' Garold Estill O ' Neal. Eddie Edwards, Glen McNay, Li. Rifle 7 ecum The Hairsplitters, as they are known on the campus, officially are members of the University Rifle Team. Following the selections of the candidates for the sharpshooter ' s team each year, the marksmen imme- diately begin to get a bead on nearby universities and colleges and this year won more than seventy-five per cent of their great shooting matches. Under the astute coaching of Lieutenant Bernard C. O ' Neal and Sergeant P. M. Brooks, the group made two trips this year. They competed with Ohio State, Ohio University, the University of West Virginia, and the University of Kentucky on the first and most extensive trip. Competition at the University of Chicago also high- lighted the team ' s season, and a match with Rose Poly- technical Institute was conducted on the range of the Terre Haute college. Not quite so well known, although also a formidable outfit before the targets, is the Freshman Rifle Team. This year these Bull ' s-eye boys have challenged five other colleges to shoulder matches, but have been ac- cepted by none. Says Lieutenant O ' Neal, They ' re just too tough for most teams. Outstanding freshmen on the team are Max Allison, Ryan Berkeley, William Link, Delvern McFall, William Cavin, Gerald Carpenter, and Volmar Franze. 31 Miltiasui, fcall Undoubtedly one of the biggest and best dances of each year is the Military Ball when every ed on the campus dons either his uniform, tux, or tails, and drafts his favorite coed for an evening of goose-stepping, or rather dancing. The three hours at the dance may be spent peering through the palms at part of the decorations .... grand marching under a row of sabers .... just dancing, thank you .... or at the usual joe and boress session down in the Commons where apparently some of the eds decided fo wait on themselves so they could hurry back and dance again to that smooth music of Joe Palmer. 32 M US I C DRllilA DEBATE Ilte. AudutosUuwi Housing the latest in modern equipment for theatrical and musical productions, as well as possessing excellent acoustics for lectures, is the University Auditorium, which seats approximately four thousand persons. University students and townspeople have had the opportunity to hear and see some of the most outstanding artists in the entertainment field as well as educators and commentators both in the Auditorium Series and on the Convocation programs. The facilities and uses of the Auditorium are numerous. Besides making it possible for a large number of persons to attend any University func- tion at one time, the huge limestone structure, a fine example of architectural beauty, enables the students in the Department of Speech to use modern stage equipment, an up-to-the-minute radio studio, and endless rooms for wardrobe, property, and set construction work. Probably one of the most appreciated functions of the Auditorium is that of giving the Marching Hundred members a place for their instruments and a practice room for rainy days — moving it out of the crowded quarters of the brown building on Jordan Field where the trumpets and tubas were heard any clear day for so many years. The added seating space the Auditorium affords also has made it possible for the scheduling of special programs by Nelson Eddy and the Metro- politan Opera ' s production of Aida. 35 Attnactfon i ol Mi The magic fingers of Jose Iturbi, as he played for the only afternoon Auditorium Series program this year, show the strength necessary to master complicated piano selections .... Show stealers in the production of Life With Father were the four sons of Clarence Day .... The talented harpist, Mildred Dilling, thrilled the Series audience with her artistry .... William Lyon Phelps, professor-emeritus of Yale University, appeared on the campus again this year on one of the Series programs to discuss his favorite contemporary books .... That cosmopolite of all American poets, Carl Sandburg, who calls no state his own but has lived at some time or another in nearly every section of the United States, entertained Series goers with a discussion of An Evening With Carl Sandburg. 2 AuxJUtosUusn Sesu i Master of violin fantasy is Albert Spalding who appeared this year for the first of the University ' s Auditorium Series .... Lucille Meusel, Lydia Orlova, and Lucien Prideaux made the San Carlo Opera Company ' s performance of La Traviata a sparkling pro- duction .... Members of the Don Cossack chorus relax back stage after one of those strenuous Russian dances .... Marian Anderson, who thrilled the Series audience with her throaty contralto, re- hearses before the performance .... Other attractions not pictured were The Barber of Seville, Dr. Mary E. Woolley, the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo, and four concerts by the Indianapolis Symphony orchestra with Alexander Kipnis, bass baritone, and Madame Dorthee Manski appearing as soloists. Miss Dilling was another of the artists performing with the Symphony. THE WOMEN fyniuesibUu, lUeatn LADIES IN RETIREMENT THE MAN WHO CAME TO DINNER 38 With cries of Don ' t turn your back to the audience, Enunciate more clearly, and Get a little action into this, ringing in their ears, members of the University Theatre direct and pro- duce the series of productions which entertain the students all year in the Little Theatre of the Auditorium. Almost before the grease paint has worn entirely off from one play, the group begins work on another. This year ' s brilliant performances ran the gamut from comedy to heavy drama, with the particularly brilliant and humorous Man Who Came To Dinner, which recently was with- drawn from professional production because of the movie made from the script, and the sparkling all feminine cast show The Women highlighting the list of season hits. The weird Jim Dandy which, in the words of the writer William Saroyan, had no plot, no characters, and no setting, undoubtedly was one of the year ' s most discussed productions. The music for this peculiar play, which still has the students guessing, was written by Allen Hovenas, a professional composer, and arranged and directed by Stuart Cohn. Although Jim Dandy, sponsored by the National Theatre Conference, has not been produced professionally, it has been considered for summer Broadway production. Sinister and dramatic was Ladies in Retirement, ably directed by the members of th e Little Theatre, a branch of the University Theatre group. The annual Jordan River Revue was a pleasant relief this year from the usual script concern- ing college life because of its musical comedy plot set on Broadway. The last play of the current school year, Mrs. Moonlight, rounded out another successful season for the theatrical group. Although the activities of the University Theafre and the Little Theatre are directly under the leadership of Theta Alpha Phi, dramatic honorary, any student on the campus may try out for parts in any of the productions. Each play has a student director, usually chosen from the ranks of the University Theatre and the Little Theatre staffs, who is directly responsible to one of the faculty members, Foster Harmon, Darrell Ross, or V. A. Smith, who alternate in directing the cam- pus plays. JIM DANDY 39 (Above) Sonya Schlee and Bob Tindall (Below) Bob Tindall and the dancing chorus Sally Hull and Dan Bake fjosidan (live i (leuue Changing the mill run of Jordan River Revue scripts from their usual setting at Indiana University or on some other college campus, Stuart Cohn and George Wille- ford collaborated on this year ' s Revue to make an unusual and sparkling first-rate musical comedy show that smacked of Broadway and professionalism. The plot concerned a lyric writer and a composer who were trying to finish a musical score for a Broadway show in a short time. Most of the action was laid in the Georgia home of one of the boys ' grandparents, and the final scene took place on a New York stage. With Sally Hull and Dan Baker cast in the leading roles, the 1942 Revue was unusual in at least one other feature besides setting , for stage hands, property girls, and other backstage workers were shown putting the set together right on the stage. Directed by Foster Harmon, conducted by Gordon Williams, and with music arranged by Dick Shores, the Jordan River Revue boasted a cast of sixty-five singers, actors, and dancers. For the first time in several years, five performances of the show were given here on the campus. Another showing of this year ' s Revue was for the Scottish Rite in Indianapolis. Theta Alpha Phi, honorary for dramatic students, sponsored the pro- duction. 40 To help a nervous audience pass away the time between eliminations of this year ' s Arbutus Beauty Show, Theta Alpha Phi, dramatic honorary, presented a variety show with acts ranging from Stu Cohn ' s oh-so-typical song, The 10:30 Blues, to the spontaneous performance of several persons selected at random from the audience. Guided by Jack Hatfield, the performance, given this year in place of the annual Cabaret Show, represented about the very best that Indiana has to offer in the way of campus talent and entertainment. Bob Barnes, with the inimitable Annabelle, played, while the other variety acts included Jimmy Clark ' s vocalizing, Tommie Wright at the piano, the Incognitos, a colored quartette, and Oscar Carrington and his harmonica. Arbutus Beauty Queens are Verr Barbara Meek, Pat Frigge, and June Dell Taylor, Marge Buckn Prospective queens stop primping before the Arbutus Beauty Shov and watch the handsome photographer. Judges were Noble Bretzmon, portrait photographer; Homer Schleh of the Chicago Sun; and Lois Gerdts of L. S. Ayres. Contestants wait for the decision of the judges. 41 Theta Alpha Phi and drafted spectato fyttwenAjtu, Iteatne. Staj That they take care of the practical side of the creative art in the theatre, might be said of the members of the business staff of the University Theatre. Living by the creed, the show must go on, as much as any Hamlet or Romeo ever did, this group is the one which prints and distributes all the posters, programs, and tickets for each of the Theatre plays. They also are in complete charge of the sale of sea- son books for the University Theatre productions, and the business end of the Jordan River Revue is their own project from the beginning to the end. The personnel of the staff includes a business manager, who always is a senior, four junior associates, and approximately twelve sophomore assistants. Members of the group are chosen by Professor Lee Norvelle, director of the University Theatre, on the basis of their work during the previous year. Freshman applicants usually begin work on the Jordan River Revue and work also on the last play of the season. In addition, members of the University Theatre stGff also handle the business de- tails of plays produced by the Experimental Theatre, as well as those exacting problems of choral reading programs given by classes in the Division of Speech. First Row: Marilyn Seward, June Brown, Betty Lu Wenger, Bar- ira Wells. Second Row: Jack Graves, Lee Ford, Roger Stull, John Torphy. 42 Advised and directed by their beloved Prof (Professor Lee R. Norvelle, head of the Division of Speech), members of the University Theatre Staff carry on the produc- tion of the Theatre ' s brilliant performances. Business manager Bob Gates takes care of the financial end of the deal. (Below) First Row: Bernice Brown, Louise Cookson, Nelle Bernard, Eleanor Houghton. Second Row: Alan Dunlap, Howard Knight, John Allman. 43 First Row ELAINE AX DOOVID BARSKIN BETTY BOHANNON BOB BRIGHT Second Row RUTH J. GORDON DICK HOUK JOHN McGREEVEY BETTY JANE MOWRY 44 keta Alalia Plu Theta Alpha Phi, honorary society for those who are past masters at the art of emoting, took on this year the production of the stage show in connection with the annual Arbutus Beauty Show. The professional air of a New York stage presentation prevailed, including beautiful girls, gag men, and a swing band. Grease paint and footlights mean home to Theta Alpha Phi members, who carry their interest in the theatre even to their bi-monthly dinner meetings, where they hear one-act plays and speeches by some members of their group. Home also is the new Auditorium, where Theta Alpha Phi has furnished the Green Room in the ' Little Theatre and the Women ' s Lounge from the proceeds of professional performances given by small units of the group. Indiana is the birthplace of Theta Alpha Phi. Ten students founded the first chapter on St. Val- entine ' s Day in 1922. Membership in the society entails a high scholastic average and an aggre- gate of fifty points in any type of theatre activi- ties, including acting, techincal assistance, busi- ness management, and publicity. The outstanding actor and actress of the year are recognized at the annual Speech Banquet in the spring, and their names are engraved on a plaque in the Library. The Neizer Award, for out- standing freshmen actors, and the Paul Hochgeiger Award, for distinguished service to the theatre, also are given at this banquet. Dr. Lee R. Norvelle is sponsor of the group, and js national president of Theta Alpha Phi. CLEMENT STIGDON Presi dent BETTY JANE MOWRY Vice-President CHARLOTTE FIELDS Secretary 45 Men ' s Varsity Debate First Row: (left to right) Paul Martin, Bill Wein- stein, Wayne Minnick, and Dr. Larson. Second Row: (left to right) Bill Haeberle, Paul Schwehn, Mike Fox, and Bill Robinson. Women ' s Varsity Debate First Row: (left to right) Elizabeth Deane, Betty Jane Smith, Betty Foss, and Margaret Fargo. Second Row: (left to right) Mary Wiseman. Marianna Ashby, and Eleanor Conner. Freshman Debate Seated: (left to right) Al Losche, Robert Currey. Bill Egly, and James Murphy. Standing: (left to right) Toney Flack, Lionell Bill- man, John Eicholz, Charles Pearce, and Walter Gadient. 3)euatitt 46 We ' re training early so we can win our arguments more easily later on, (although they may not have thought of this when they began, it seems logical), is the cry from the Indiana Uni- versity Debating Teams, and the training seems to have been very effective for all three sections of debating. Proving their worth, the varsity men, varsity women, and freshman men and women brought home honors from this year ' s forensic conferences. The varsity women ' s team honored the University by tieing for the Big Ten championship tour- ney with Northwestern University in February. They debated on the subject: Resolved, That the United States and the British Commonwealth of Nations should form a permanent union. Margaret Fargo and Betty Foss took the affirmative side and Betty Jane Smith and Elizabeth Dean upheld the negative side. This was Miss Fargo ' s and Miss Foss ' final year in collegiate debating and they have well earned their laurels by winning every decision debate throughout the last four years. The men ' s varsity debate squad participated in the Big Ten men ' s conference at Iowa in March, with William Robinson, Wayne Minnick, William Haeberle, and Paul Martin representing Indiana. Haeberle and Martin upheld the affirmative side of the question: Resolved, That the democra- cies should form a federation to establish and maintain the eight Churchill-Roosevelt principles. Robinson and Minnick debated the negative side, but the results of this tournament had not been announced at the time of this writing. The freshman men and women debaters carried off second place among fourteen schools here on February 14. Later they debated at Manches er College but no results were announced from that contest. The freshman squad was chosen b an elimination earlier in the current school year. Debater Bill Robinson in action as Bill Haeberle listens. eatfii 47 First Row LEN BUNGER FRED CASE MARGARET FARGO Second Row BETTY FOSS ROBERT GATES JO AN NE PIERPONT PAUL SCHWEHN 7o Kap ia AUUta We ' re so busy looking up ponderous facts for our debates that the only time we meet is to select new members, said a member of Tau Kappa Alpha. Actually, Tau Kappa Alpha, honorary forensic soci- ety, sponsors the intramural debate tournament each year. Eugene McClosky and Bill Weinstein, represent- ing Pi Lambda Phi fraternity, captured this year ' s tour- ney, while the South Hall pair. Jack Eicholz and Jim Murphy, were the runners-up in the heated contest. Tau Kappa Alpha also finds time to recognize out- standing debaters at the Speech Banquet each spring, helps with the Bryan Oratorical Contest, also an annual spring event, and assists in arranging all inter-colle- giate debating conferences during the year. At the society ' s congress at Purdue University in December, Margaret Fargo, president of the Indiana chapter, was the presiding officer, as she also is the president of the group ' s Indiana-Michigan district. A group of undergraduate students from Butler, Wa- bash, Indiana, DePauw, and Notre Dame organized Tau Kappa Alpha in 1908. In 1914, the group was re-organized on the basis of independent college chap- ters, and the local chapter was begun in 1915. Orvin Larson acts as the able sponsor of the chapter. 48 First Row ELAINE AX BETTY LOU GRIMSLEY LENORA A. GUTSTEIN ELIZABETH M. HAUPT Second Row BARBARA JOHNSON FRANCES CAROLYN JOHNSON BETTY JANE MOWRY JEANETTE FLORENCE PASS Sixfma Alpha 9ota FRANCES JOHNSON President ELAINE AX Vice-President BETTY HAUPT Secretary Notice, male students: If your girl wants to B natural or B sharp, and if she has a B average and knows the beautiful, breath-taking compositions of Bach, Bee- thoven, and Brahms, she probably is a member of Sigma Alpha lota, national professional music fraternity for women. Sigma Alpha lota was founded at the University of Michigan in 1903. lota Epsilon chapter was established on this campus in 1939 with seventeen charter members. The principal aims of the organization are to promote and dignify the musical profession for women; to fur- ther the development of music in America; and to raise the standards of production of music among the wom- en students in various colleges, conservatories, and universities. There are at present thirty active members in the local organization, eleven of whom now are on the campus. Among the awards given each year by the organiza- tion to its members are the Sword of Honor to the outstanding member and a Certificate of Scholarship to the senior with the highest scholastic average. Musi- cals take up part of the group ' s monthly meetings as do talks by prominent musicians. Among the national honorary members are Rose Bampton, Kirsten Flagstad, Myra Hess, Lily Pons, and Gladys Swarthout, all members of the Metropolitan Opera Company. 49 First Row: Jean Burns, Ruth Dixon, Martha Lewis, Helen Burton, Phoebe Jane Crookes. Second Row: Bob Pence, Bernice Surratt, Marjorie Dailey, Frances Silverman, Beverly Barker, Ned Gardner. Third Row: John Sherwood, Maurice Taulman, Morgan Drescher, Warren Wooldridge, Pat O ' Brien, Jiggs Cummins, George Willeford. Pto-Mttiic GluJf- J. ROBERT PENCE President ELAINE AX Vice-President ELIZABETH HAUPT Secretary BETTY JANE MOWRY Treasurer There must be some mistake! For at last a no key, no hat, and no pin honorary has been discovered. To encourage the establishment of other music hon- oraries on the campus was the origincl purpose of the Pro-Music Club when it was founded here, June 10, 1936. That aim has been partially accomplished since Sigma Alpha lota, professional music fraternity for wom- en, was established here two years ago, and since there is a movement to petition the national music fra- ternity for men, Phi Mu Alpha. Now the group ' s music- loving members have turned to the promotion of better relations between the students and members of the fac- ulty of the School of Music. Limited to the students in the School of Music who have a C average or better, the Club usually meets once each month. Christmas activities ranked at the top of the group ' s social events for this year. However, turn- ing to the more serious side of college life, the Pro-Mu- sic Club also discussed for the first time the possibility of setting up new scholarship awards. 50 Awutu . Smiling Jean Dickson, editor- in-chief, was the chief overseer and guide in the production of the 1942 Arbutus. In charge of the senior section was Betty Bates, a junior asso- ciate editor. Bob Anderson, a junior asso- ciate editor, was the book ' s all- around sports handler. We don ' t want to set the world on fire — we just want to get this book out on time, shouted members of the Ar- butus staff as they dashed to the Com- mons for their fifth coke of the afternoon or evening. But then changes were made. War was declared and with it came the University ' s definitely speeded up speed-up plan. Editor Jean Dickson and Business Man- ager Bob Frank racked their brains to think of some maxim that would keep their staffs on the beam and in step with the war measure of the University. Poetry came to the rescue and the result was — Into the Commons you may not look, We have to finish writing this book. 52 8 0 v The capable business manager, Bob Frank, was the official finan- cier for this year ' s Arbutus. The circulating circulation man- ager, John Painter, circulates via a Union Building elevator. Indianapolis assistants were William Sholty and J. Harmon Bjorklund, business manager and edi- tor for the School of Medicine, and Jack Fein- tuck and L. Howard White, business manager and editor for the School of Dentistry. No time for your love life — To study is sin; No matter what happens This has to go in. Using their leaders ' poetic attempt as the modern design for living, members of the staffs deserted all the favorite joeing spots on the campus — and even aban- doned their most cherished classes on rare occasions — to get the 1942 Arbutus out on time. To them vacations and class- less Saturdays meant only more hours of work in that tiny office on the third floor of the Union Building, getting all stuck up with rubber cement and turning black with carbon as they mounted pictures and typed. Sophomore assistants on the editorial staff were Chilton Brown, Barbara Bercaw, Don Gray, Marge Hasbrook, Martha Fetterly, Betty Lu Wenger, Vir- ginia Hawley, Jim Tedford, Sid Cahn, Marselda Jacobs, Jean Schabinger, and Jane Schabinger. The tedious job of scheduling pictures was handled by John Holdcraft, a junior associate busi- ness manager. All campus organization houses were contacted by Jeanne Pier- son, a junior associate business manager. Copy writing for the 1942 Arbutus was directed by Jean Ragon, a junior associate editor. Sophomores assisting on the business staff were Mary Kellie, Barbara Wells, Tom Purky, Bud Givan, Pat Droit, Frank Hamilton, Marian Specht, Harry Halsall, Lorraine Holsinger, and Sally Walker. Informal pictures for the book were scheduled and photo- graphed by Walt Lerner, a junior associate editor. Less experienced workers were directed by Wilfred Lusher, a junior associate editor in charge of mounting pictures. Another Arbutus financier was advertising manager Jim Sublette, a junior associate busi- ness manager. 55 The INDIANA DAILY STUDENT Sco pA coileaei. .uxltli Mian, exfria . . . Always first with the latest might well be applied to the campus newspaper in at least one instance when The Indiana Daily Student issued an extra, December 7, following the bombing of Pearl Harbor. It was the only college publication to get out such an edition. Gov-etii. , te.w4, ofo cam j%uA. and staw-n . . . With nearly fifty reporters and twenty editors, all in the embryo stage, to cover the campus and town, The Student is of considerable service in giving publicity to all University enterprises and in informing the student body on such important town happenings as the City Council activities and Red Cross work. Podtd. Ahtden L an Anoxia enenti . . . A member of the Associated Press using a fulltime teletype service from Indianapolis and Chicago, The Student not only takes care of campus activities, but gives the reading student body an adequate digest of national and international happenings. 9 4. Aed My sp,n.o-an i4yiue. edUtaiA Alexander Muir, Winston Fournier, and Dan Holthouse capably led the efforts of the neophyte journal- ists as editors of the daily this year, directing their editorial columns toward furthering an ever-better and greater Indiana University. And Uezfid. d-ta fi memben.4. bu y . . . If anyone just by accident should happen to wander, out of pure curiosity, into a squatty limestone- gray building next door to the Power Plant, and see an assortment of students tearing their hair and yelling like mad in an uproar of banging typewriters amidst a welter of rough copy paper, he should not be alarmed at his first thought of having happened into a first class insane asylum. It is only The Daily Student Staff getting out the World ' s Greatest College Daily (dubbed thus by its own admission). The cause of such riotous actions might well be understood on the last day of February, for then this finest of all college publications observed its seventy-fifth anniversary with a Diamond Jubilee banquet. The waggish Mickey McCarty, Indianapolis newspaperman, the sage Dr. William Lowe Bryan, the state ' s chief administrator Henry F. Schricker, and President Herman B Wells sent the already inflated ego of The Student Staff members up several notches with their lavish praises of the work which they are now doing and have done in the past. Razzing former faculty advisers. Professor John E. Stempel, head of the De- partment of Journalism, ably handled the roastmaster post. When the hurried staff members are not tearing around digging up stories that no one knows about, they relax twice a year from all night vigils on the rim for the Swing-In Swing-Out party when the new staff meets the old one, certificates for good work are received by ambitious reporters and desk workers, appointments for top positions are made, and each staff entertains with a corny skit. 56 Charles Sembower, Howdy Wi cox, Leona Menze, Winston Four- nier, Anne Douglas, Jean Ragon, and Dan C. Holthouse. Knight McKesson, Mary Anne Slew, and Rodney Anderson. June Rowland, Leona Menze, Ed Ferrey, Howdy Wilcox, Beryl Ann Brownell, Delores Small, and John Byers. Anne Douglas and Winston C Fournier. Paul H. Wagner, faculty ad- viser, and Jean Ragon. Marian Glick and Al Malek. Bloomington ' s summers hold no terrors for those aspiring jour- nalists who each year brave the heat of the little grey oven, the Daily Student building, to publish the summer issues of The Student. Printed twice each week and distributed free to students, a skeleton staff struggles with the problems of a small paper and reams of news copy to produce a paper which may be called a good example of the W.G.C.D. National and foreign news is supplied by the Associated Press from Indianapolis, via bus, while reporters and editors cover the events on the campus and in the city. Members of last summer ' s staff included David Kennedy, editor- in-chief; Bob Neff, managing editor; Joan Doyle, campus editor, and Charles Sembower, city editor. Ue Summesi Student 7 4e State tf-cU i Student Amid the dust and heat of late summer a picked staff of report- ers slave annually to write and edit the daily news of the Indiana State Fair for a special week ' s edition of The Daily Student, distributed on the Fairgrounds in Indianapolis and in Bloomington. Using part of the Indiana University building on the Midway as an office, the reporters cover the entire fair from the swine barns to the sulky races. Stories are delivered to Bloomington by bus, where a student makes up the paper and supervises the printing of the completed edition, part of which is sent back to Indianapolis. Members of this year ' s staff were Alexander Muir, editor; How- ard Wilcox, June Richardson, Jean Ragon, Knight McKesson, Edgar Ferrey, William Spencer, and Winston Fournier. 58 Paul Schwehn, Logan Miller, Charles Sembower, Joan Doyle, Betsy Hutchings, and Jack Wright. Jud Frommer, Betty Savesky, and Charles Wade. Bill Spencer, Mary Jane Smith, and Wini Young. June Richardson Kathleen O ' Banion, Betty Bates, Bill Swinford, Lynn Van- Natta, Marguerite Brown, and Joe Smith. fyoUo- Stall As the literary magazine of Indiana University, The Folio serves as an outlet for the creative writings and expressions of all students on the campus. In the capa- ble hands of editor Mae Louise Kohr, the magazine has become a work of the students alone. Articles are chosen from volunteer contributions, as well as from outstanding work done in the Department of English. The publication is divided into three sections: non- fiction, fiction, and poetry. Three readers study and dis- cuss the merits of the various writings for each section. They also decide upon the illustrations to be used. Even though The Folio has no definite art staff, Paul Roher, Marjory Reeves, and Peggy Koch divide the work among themselves with the result that several interesting sketches have appeared in the four issues. As an innovation this year, Becky Bartlett, business manager, says that The Folio is being financed en- tirely by sales. The members of the staff feel that adver- tising has no place in a publication of such nature. Joan Ryan serves as the co-ordinating managing- editor, and C. Bradford Mitchell is the faculty advisor for the student staff, which edits the magazine entirely with only helpful suggestions from the instructors of the Department of English. Edward J. Anderson, Gloria Claman, C. Bradford Mitchell, Mae Louise Kohr, Gordon Saver, Dorothy Jean Hunter, Marc Shavel, Lillian Rymarowicz, Becky Bartlett. 60 AUunni MaXfOfyine The infant of all University publications, the Indiana Alumni Magazine has been published monthly, October through June, since the fall of 1938. The Magazine, official publication of the Indiana University Alumni As- sociation, keeps graduates and former students in touch with the latest news of the University and personal data on individual alumni. The Magazine was not the first publication for alumni, having been preceded by two others — the Alumni Quarterly (1913-1938) and the Indiana Alumnus ( 1921-1938). Both were discontinued in October, 1938, ond the Monthly Magazine substituted. The Alumni Quarterly was a scholarly journal published four times a year. The Indiana Alumnus, a semi-monthly edition of The Indiana Daily Student, summarized the news of the campus and also carried classnotes. The Alumni Magazine, still in the experimental stage, has been changed from a straight magazine with em- phasis on streamlined writing style and an abundance of photographs. Editor of the Magazine is George F. (Dixie) Heigh- v ay, LL.B. ' 22, assisted by Andrew G. Olofson, A.B. ' 39, as managing editor; Ivy L. Chamness, A.B. ' 06, as as- sociate editor, and Hilda Henwood, A.B. ' 32, as class- notes editor. Since the opening of the War, the Alumni Magazine has featured news about Indiana men now in the Service, and special membership rates set for the alumni in the armed forces. Andrew G. Olofson, managing editor; Miss Hilda Henwood, assistant in the Publications office; Miss Ivy Chamness, head of the Publications office; G. F. Heighway, alumni secretary. 61 First Row FELIX BOGART JOHN GEORGE BYERS EDGAR FERREY WINSTON C. FOURNIER DAN C. HOLTHOUSE Second Row WILFRED LUSHER ALEXANDER E. MALEK ALEXANDER F. MUIR PAUL WILLIAM SCHWEHN CHARLES WILLIAM SEMBOWER Third Row WILLIAM A. SPENCER CHARLES R. WADE HOWARD S. WILCOX JOHN A. WRIGHT 62 Sicjjna 2 eua GUi If a poor, unsuspecting, and non-journalistic- minded student happens to find himself on the third floor of the Union Building around noon on any Tuesday, he is more than likely to be killed in the rush as the overly enthusiastic members of Sigma Delta Chi dash to Room 307, commonly re- ferred to as the Don Mellet Memorial Den. Here they meet to discuss the weighty problems con- fronting all newspapermen. Sigma Delta Chi, the national Greek-letter pro- fessional journalistic fraternity, is the exclusive or- ganization of outstanding men who help publish one of the greatest of college newspapers, name- ly, The Indiana Daily Student. They constitute the group that almost caused the blood pressure of several hundred campus males to reach a new high when they promised that actress Lana Turner would attend the traditional Blanket Hop follow- ing the Purdue-Indiana football game. Limited to men who plan to enter some field of writing or newspaper work, S.D.X. was founded at DePauw University in 1909. The local chapter, established in 1913, besides sponsoring the an- nual Blanket Hop, from which the proceeds are used to buy I blankets for graduating athletes, awards two one-hundred dollar scholarships each year to sophomore men who show outstanding ability as journalists. The Scribble Society also sponsors a state-wide high school newspaper con- test and the traditional Gridiron banquet. Paul Wagner, of the Department of Journalism, is faculty adviser, and Professor John E. Stempel, head of the Department of Journalism, is a past national president of the organization. ALEXANDER F. MUIR President HOWARD W. WILCOX Vice-President FELIX A. BOGART Secretary 63 Ueta Siama Phi BERYL ANN BROWNELL President JANICE POPE Vice-President BETTY SAVESKY Secretary Speaking of journalism, there is a national pro- fessional sorority on campus called Theta Sigma Phi. It is through the merging of the masterful minds of these marvelous maidens that much of the meaty matter is molded which makes up the ma- terial for the most magnificent of journalistic mas- terpieces, The Indiana Daily Student. It would be a major mistake to miss mentioning the annual Matrix Table dinner where many cam- pus misses and city matrons meet to hear a speaker who is prominent in some field of journalism. The Matrix marvel of 1941 was Alice Duer Miller, who appeared here on November 4 to read her own narrative poem, The White Cliffs. Each year the mystic maneuverings of these modern coeds of Theta Sigma Phi combine to pro- duce one of the most entertaining of campus events — the Theta Sig Razz Banquet, given this year on March 31. The proceeds from this affair are put in a scholarship fund which provides tui- tion for a sophomore woman majoring in journal- ism. Delta chapter of Theta Sigma Phi was organized on this campus in 1913, four years after the soror- ity was founded at the University of Washington. Among the prominent alumnae of the local chap- ter are Margaret Weymouth Jackson, Miriam Ma- son Swain, and Jeanette Covert Nolan. Another alumna, Miss Naomi Osbor ne, was elected na- tional treasurer of Theta Sigma Phi at the national convention at the University in June of last year. Mrs. John E. Stempel serves as the adviser for the organization. 64 First Row BERYL ANN BROWNELL ANNE DOUGLAS HELEN GLENN MARION JEAN GLICK BETSY HUTCHINGS Second Row JANICE LOUISE POPE MADELYN PUGH JEAN RAGON JUNE ROWLAND BETTY JANE SAVESKY 65 Red Book Contrary to the reputation built up about some cam- pus publications, the Red Book came out this year three weeks ahead of schedule. Published by the Y.M.C.A. and edited by Glen Smith, the book is a directory of all University students, their years, addresses, and home towns. Information in the book is compiled from cards filled out during registration. Financiers were Max Wool- ery, business manager, and J. Warren Fox, advertising manager. tftedJuftaa cJfcistdbooJz To help the entering male freshman through his registration blues and to speed his orientation into Uni- versity life and customs, the Freshman Handbook is published each year by the Union Board. Bob Gates, who edited the book this year, was assisted by Jack Eason. A detailed description of all campus activities, as well as the work done by all of the various organizations, is included in this handy little Handbook. ItUletic Review So that students can recognize the faces of their favorite football players after they get all muddy from a grueling game, the Indiana Athletic Review publishes a football program for each home game. Within its covers are statistics on the Indiana and visiting teams, personality sketches of both teams, and a whole Rogues ' Gallery of all the players. Published by the Athletic Department, the Review also prints basketball programs. 66 First Row ED BARTLEY FRED EWING CASE DAVID SCOTT DANIELS DON DAVIS MAURICE R. KIRKWOOD Second Row JOHN KRUEGER LEON H. LITTLE, Jr. ALEXANDER F. MUIR KARL G. RAHDERT EDGAR SIEGEL URBAN LOUIS UEBELHOER 68 lioanA ol Aeanl Located on the second floor of the Union Build- ing is the home of the Board of Aeons. It consists of approximately twenty feet of floor space, taken up by thirteen chairs, one table, one lamp, one typewriter, one filing case, one waste basket, and one coat rack. Each Monday night at ten o ' clock, when most students are in a warm room, twelve seniors of campus prominence trudge up the long flight of stairs and take their respective seats. The president then places his feet upon the table and everyone takes a nap while the secretary reads the minutes of the last meeting. Following this report, the eight members in the School of Business discuss corporations, monopolies, and how soon they expect their professors to enter the Army. The Board then gets down to business. During this year ' s serious business moments, the members planned a revision of the existing merit point sys- tem for senior class officers. In addition, they rec- ommended to the Administration various campus improvements, such as repairing a number of roads and walks. One of their biggest campaigns was in connection with the University ' s activities limitation program, which limits the extra-curricu- lar interests of students. The Board of Aeons was founded on the cam- pus in 1921 by President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan to serve as a connecting link between mem- bers of the faculty and the student body. In past years, it has more than served its purpose. Mem- bers include junior and senior men high in cam- pus activities and appointments are made by Pres- ident Herman B. Wells. Faculty advisers are Dean Emeritus Charles W. Sembower and Dean Clarence E. Edmondson. MAURICE KIRKWOOD President EDGAR SIEGEL Vice-President FRED CASE Secretary 69 Boa id ol StandaAdL The Board of Standards, in its three years of existence on the campus, has become famous for its numerous campaigns to guide student actions. The Board, which serves as a disciplinary group, has proved invaluable during the last year in its program to limit students with too many activities. In accomplishing this task, the Board was required to set up an elaborate point system. This system included rating each position held by coeds in every campus organization. Three coeds representing the nine-member Board, along with three members of the Board of Aeons, were appointed to serve on the Student Tribunal, the group responsible for determining whether certain individuals should drop one or more activities if they had more than the Tribunal allowed. The Board also was active in curbing certain campus activities that were believed to be detri- mental to the University system. Outstanding among these was the anti-cheating campaign. Feeling that the students were over-indulging in the practice of cheating, the Board set out to clean up the campus. This, apparently, was a hopeless task for they soon gave that up and launched an anti-necking campaign. This, too, was a futile attempt and soon dropped. Its failure was due to the lack of student support. Members elected to the Board for the last se- mester of this year include Leon a Menze, chair- man; Hester Graham, Lela Jane Ross, Rosemary Hendricks, Blanche Schultz, Marianna Ashby, Mary Steele, Marilyn Seward, and Rose Jean Spencer. The group has been working on a more satisfac- tory system of electing class officers. 70 First Row SUECORTER HELLEN DAVIS CHARMAN FRAZEE RUTH GORDON MARGARET HATALA Second Row ROSEMARY HENDRICKS LEONA MENZE EDWINA K. MYERS BETTY JEAN ROWE MIRIAM ELAINE WALTHER 71 fytUost Hog uH Although the activity of the campus may center around the comfort and convenience of the Univer- sity community center, the Commons, which caters to crowds of cute, captivating coeds and cheerful and carefree chaps, the actual organizing of Un- ion capers is carried on around a huge rectangular table eight floors above the students ' favorite joe spot where the Union Board meets every Tuesday to chart the chores of the Indiana Union. Composed of thirteen men students, two faculty advisers, an alumnus, one trustee and J. E. Pat- rick, director, the Union Board is responsible for the programs and many features of the Union. At its regular Tuesday evening meetings, the gavel- rapping President Bob Gates directs the order of business and Mr. Patrick sits at one side, gener- ally ordering a round of cokes before going to work. Probably the outstanding feature of the Union program inaugurated this year is the Wednesday afternoon Coffee Hour in the lounge. It is here that professors, University officials, and students stand on common ground and talk while drinking Java. Other activities of the Union include dances, open forums, the Pow-Wow banquet, the Grid-graph, pep sessions, billiard tournaments, the Record Hour, and last but not least, the direc- tion and operation of the Union Building. The high calibre of the Union program dates from John Whittenberger, ex- ' lO, who died in 1910 shortly after organizing the first Union. In 1932 his dream became a reality, however, with the construction of the Memorial Union Building. ROBERT E. GATES President FRED E. CASE Vice-President JOHN KRUEGER Secretary 72 First Row ROBERT D. ANDERSON ED BARTLEY EMIL CHARLES BECK WILLIAM LLOYD BRIDGES FRED EWINGCASE Second Row ROBERT E. GATES JOHN KRUEGER ROBERT LUCAS KENNETH MOELLER ORAL RICKE JOHN VISHER 73 First Row CHARLOTTE COOPER ELIZABETH DEANE JANE GAFF HESTER LOUISE GRAHAM Second Row JANE HUDSON BARBARA JOHNSON NORMA KUNZ MARY MANN Third Row EDWINA K. MYERS MARY FRANCES REES BETTY JANE ROACH RACHEL STONER RUTH TAYLOR 74 A. W. S. Emancipation might be the watchword of the mighty organization, the Association of Women Students, for no longer is the male student superior on the campus. The emancipation movement realty began back in the post-war days of 1920 under the direction of Dr. Agnes E. Wells, former Dean of Women, who encouraged a determined band of coeds to organize the Association. Thus there was a new birth of freedom on the campus. Since that time women students have continued to band together and now are united under the direction of a thirteen-member council. Five of this council are its officers and the remaining eight are elected from both the organized and independent ranks of the sophomore, junior, and senior classes. Five major committees carry on the work of the Association. The power of the Association of Women Stu- dents is far-reaching. It not only rules over such matters as no stags at Union-A.W.S. dances but also determines who will be its most able pourer at its numerous teas. However, the purpose of the or- ganization is one of helpfulness. At the beginning of each school year, numerous coed counsellors take over the huge task of orientating new women students. They teach the maintenance of high standards of University life and the bringing about of greater unity and mutual helpfulness among the women students. Among the numerous activities that A.W.S. sponsors, in collaboration with the Union Board, are Friday night dances in the Union Building. The Board of Standards, set up in 1939 by A.W.S., enforces the rulings of the organization as well as the rulings of the University. MARY REES President MARY MANN Vice-President CHARLOTTE COOPER Secretary 75 First Row LOIS ARMSTRONG LEONILA BADGER NAOMI B. BOUCHARD MYRTLE BRIER BERNICE BROWN BERYL ANN BROWNELL HELLEN DAVIS ELIZABETH FRASER Second Row CHARMAN FRAZEE MARY ELLEN HAZEL ANNE HENDRICKS ROSEMARY HENDRICKS JANE HUDSON NORMA KUNZ HILDA LEASE MRS. BETTY JANE MORAN Third Row EMMA LUCY PHILLIPP MARY FRANCES REES LELA JANE ROSS BETTY JEAN ROWE JULIA STRAIN ELLEN TAYLOR MILLIE COX VICKERY 76 y. w. e. a. The annual Freshman Frolic starts an almost continuous round of social activities sponsored by the University ' s Young Women ' s Christian Associ- ation. This dance, however, is only one part of the group ' s program to promote friendship among the new students. Also during the first week of school, the Y.W. has a picnic, breakfast, and luncheon to help freshmen girls get acquainted with each other and to make them feel more at home. During the year, monthly parties and teas, sponsored jointly by the Y.W.C.A. and the Y.M. C.A., add to the social activities of this campus organization. In addition, the two groups plan and organize the all-University sing, which was not competitive this year. Turning to the more serious activities of the Y.W.C.A., its members meet regularly in informal round-table groups to discuss philosophy, music, international relations, and social and economic problems. Hobby groups also meet for coeds inter- ested in hiking, riding, reading, poetry, music, dra- matics, and handicrafts. Nor are services to the campus and community excluded from the program of the Y.W.C.A. The service groups strive to aid under-privileged chil- dren in Bloomington as well as lead Girl Scout troops and the Girl Reserves in the city schools. Characterized by faith in the ability of each individual to create and contribute to the social whole, the Y.W.C.A. is an organization where dif- ferent personalities may meet on the ground of common belief in the realness of deeper values and form valuable friendships through similar in- terests. LOIS ARMSTRONG President BETTY JEAN ROWE Vice-President ANNE HENDRICKS Secretary BERNICE BROWN Treasurer 77 MODERN DANCE GROUP % ' . A. A. MARY C. WEINLAND President HELEN SMITH Vice-President MARY ELSNER Secretary All women who are of the athletic type or who have hopes of falling into that category are eligible for W.A.A. In order to become a member of this organiza- tion, the hopefuls must pass a test in any of several sports or become a member of any of the clubs spon- sored by the group. Although not nearly so rigid and so toughening as the new gymnastic program, introduced the second se- mester for men students over twenty years of age, the coeds ' daily practices in Dunn Meadow and the Student Building keep them physically fit. One of the more important services sponsored by the Women ' s Athletic Association is the intramural athletic tournaments open to all campus women. A loving cup is awarded to winners in the various divisions of volley- ball, basketball, archery, tennis, swimming, ping-pong, baseball, and deck-tennis. W.A.A. also sponsors various athletic clubs for wom- en. The Hiking Club, the Modern Dance group, and Oceanides, swimming honorary, are all under its direc- tion. The organization takes part in Play Days several times a year, when girls from all over the state meet to participate in various sports just for fun. It also gives a senior banquet at the end of the school year for grad- uating women and publishes a weekly bulletin of its activities. 78 First Row ELAINE AX JULIA A. BALOGH ELSIE CHALFANT GLORIA CLAMAN HELEN CODY CHARLOTTE COOPER RUTHE A. EDWARDS Second Row MARY ELSNER ANNE HENDRICKS MARGARET HILLIS GERTRUDE KNELLEKEN BETTY LOCKRIDGE LEONA MENZE MADYLON O ' DOWD Third Row MARIE O ' DOWD JUNE RICHARDSON HELEN L. SMITH MARTHA STEDMAN MARY STEELE MARY WEINLAND 79 First Row JOHN BAILEY JAMES W. BATCHELOR THEODORE E. BOCKSTAHLER J. WARREN FOX Second Row JULES HENDRICKS KARL JOHNSON ERNEST CLIFTON JONES MONROE KOONTZ Third Row fred l. Mclaughlin karl g. rahdert roger rumph w. courtney seagle Fourth Row ROBERT J. SABIN GLEN E. SMITH ED STUART ARTHUR THOMAS UPDIKE FRANK J. WRAY y. m. e. a. ED STUART gBBlMJ President TED BOCKSTAHLER | yfig ||. .Vice-President FRANK WRAY . . P ff „. Secretary JULES HENDRICKS . . . JF Treasurer Hey, you guys, get the names and numbers of all the coeds on the campus, the Red Book salesman screams shortly after the beginning of school. A ma- jority of the student body purchases the campus social register, which is published by the Young Men ' s Chris- tian Association. Outstanding as an organization since its founding on the campus in 1891, the Y has numerous activities. Besides offering all types of leadership training, the Christian brotherhood offers the student religious edu- cation, social training, and political and economic ex- perience. The Y has its office on the third floor of the Union Building and it is governed by a senior cabinet com- posed of fourteen seniors and two senior advisers. A freshman council, made up of ten of the most outstand- ing first-year men in the organization, also has a part in regulating the government of the Association. Outstanding activities of the Y during the year include the sponsoring of the All-University Sing, a song-fest among fraternities and sororities; and the co- sponsoring with the Y.W.C.A. of such events as the Freshman Frolic, joint retreats, mixer dances, and Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter religious services. The Y also gives a breakfast for incoming freshmen at the beginning of each school year. 80 First Row SUE CORTER DON DAVIS IRVING DENTON JAMES FISCHER Second Row MARY E. HENDRICKS ROSEMARY HENDRICKS MAURICE R. KIRKWOOD HOWARD KNIGHT Third Row PAT MILLER JOHN PEARMAN WALTER ROBBINS CHARLES S. SMITH MAXINE SWAIN GolUtfiaie GJionwesi ol G mmetoe DON DAVIS President WALTER ROBBINS Vice-President ROSEMARY HENDRICKS Secretary VIRGIL NELSON Treasurer As the Indiana Union serves the students of the Uni- versity, the Collegiate Chamber of Commerce, composed of all students of the School of Business, is the vital or- gan that governs the students in that school. Known to many students as the originator of the Squeak box, in which written complaints of students are deposited, this organization made its appearance on the campus in 1927 and since that time has grown in responsibility and leadership as the school has expanded. The or- ganization was made a charter member of the National Inter-Collegiate Chamber of Commerce in 1938. The Collegiate Chamber of Commerce is ruled by a Board of Directors, pictured above, which consists of twelve students in the school. These twelve represent each class and Beta Gamma Sigma, Delta Sigma Pi, Alpha Kappa Psi, Chi Gamma, Omicron Delta, and the Accounting Club, all organizations in the School of Business. Having as its purpose the establishing of closer rela- tionship between the faculty and students of the School, the Collegiate Chamber of Commerce this year, besides sponsoring an annual Careers Conference in March, published for the first time a bi-weekly magazine con- taining news and feature articles of interest to students and members of the faculty. 31 fytedesuuty, PneAAo nti At the beck and telephone call of the president, members of the Council of Fraternity Presidents each week dash to Room 314 of the Union Building to hear the latest gossip from campus organization houses. Set- tling themselves for the tough siege ahead, the first order of business generally concerns, What can this organization do that will be most helpful to the fra- ternities? After much discussion the problems are solved and then sent to the various houses for ratifi- cation. The Office of Fraternity Affairs, composed of six members, and the Council of Fraternity Presidents were organized this year to take the place of the Inter- Fraternity Council. The change was urged by members of the University administration to help solve the many new problems that faced the fraternities after the three- semester speed-up program was introduced at the end of the first semester. Among the urgent problems discussed during the last semester were the questions of rush procedure and the matter of keeping fraternity houses open during the summer session. The annual Inter-Fraternity Ball was not given this year because of the speed-up program. Robert Royer, assistant to the Dean of Men, served as faculty adviser. JAMES ANTRIM Chairman PARKER GRAVES Secretary JACK HANSEN ROBERT RAPHAEL DON McCLELLAND BOB MacGILL 3 k mr f W S p fh l±m First Row JAMES ANTRIM HAROLD BONECUTTER TOM COSGROVE TINKER ETCHESON J. WARREN FOX Second Row ROBERT E. GATES PAUL HERTENSTEIN RICHARD M. HODSON HARRY E. HUFF ALBERT KOSNOFF Third Row WALT LERNER LYON WILLIAM ROBERT G. MOORHEAD FRED MORRIS WILLIAM MORRIS Fourth Row BOB NELSON ROBERT LEONARD RAPHAEL DICK WALKOWIAK BOB WHITE 82 Pcun- relte4uc Gcuwtcil MARY CARSON President INGE PELIKAN Vice-President MARGARET WELSH Secretary ELLEN TAYLOR Treasurer At the sound of the president ' s gavel, the various representatives of Pan-Hellenic Council rouse themselves from the depths of the chairs and davenports in the West Parlors of the Student Building and prepare for long and lengthy discussions. Sometimes the represen- tatives of each campus sorority spend two, three, or even five meetings arguing furiously over the conflicting and numerous rules for campus and summer rush. Then, there are those who fill in the few silent spots by telling how things were run when they were freshmen. Seriously speaking, however, Pan-Hellenic holds a responsible and esteemed position among campus or- ganizations. Its purposes — to maintain fraternity and inter-fraternity relations on a high plane and to dis- cuss questions of mutual interest to the fraternity world — are necessary to smooth functioning of the Greek world on the campus. Pan-Hellenic Council promotes scholarship by award- ing the Scholarship Cup to the sorority with the highest average each semester. It also offers two seventy-five dollar scholarships to girls with high activity and scho- lastic records. Sponsors of the organization are Mrs. Lottie Kirby, Dean Kate H. Mueller and Miss Margaret Rufsvold. First Row MARY A. CARSON RUTHE A. EDWARDS MARY R. EMAHISER Second Row INGE PELIKAN BETTY PRUITT MADELYN PUGH Third Row ELLEN TAYLOR CANDY THOMPSON MARGARET WELSH ZAMA WHITE 33 9. S. A. (Top) I.S.A. Board — Leonila Badger, Donald Faris, Betty Foss, Rosemary Kent, Monroe Koontz, Norma Kunz, Robert Sabin, Karl Rahdert, Scott Daniels, Art Updike. (Left) I.S.A. Council — Bottom row: Billie Lou McClure, Eugene Conner, Irene Sanders, Robert Sabin, Elizabeth Deane. Second Row: Betty Foss, George Krsek, Gloria Claman, Bob Carnahan, Norma Kunz, Karl Rahdert, Leonila Badger. (Middle) A scene at an I.S.A. dance. (Right) I.S.A. Basketball Team — Bottom Row: Bob Matthew, Tony Eiliff, Basil Paddock, Nick Angel, Carl Hilgeman. Second Row: Ralph Vogel, Ambrig Kabi- son, Jim Morgan, Albert Blake. Third Row: Bill Egly, John Edmiston, Irving Hall. University seniors this year will remember the estab- lishment, during their freshman year, of an organiza- tion called the Independent Students Association. Within four years the I.S.A. has grown from a small, ambitious group of students to a powerful organization now com- posed of more than six hundred and fifty members. Moving quietly through most of the year, the un- organized group really swings into action at election time. In almost every campus election, the unorganized vote has determined the victor, as was true in the Union Board election last year. The purpose of I.S.A. is to promote equality within the student body and to give the unorganized students a chance to express themselves in campus affairs. Activities of the organization include orientation work, a varied social program, participation in intra- mural competition, exchange of textbooks, and the pub- lishment of a monthly newspaper, The Indiana Inde- pendent. Officers this year were Karl Rahdert, president; Betty Foss, vice-president; Leonila Badger, secretary; Scott Daniels, treasurer. 84 HON ■ii ' Wi=K ' ' a ' '  - ' , RIES First Row ROBERT D. ANDERSON LEN BUNGER FRED EWING CASE DONALD C. DANIELSON CHARLES A. FEEGER EDGAR FERREY ROBERT E. GATES JULES HENDRICKS Second Row ERNEST CLIFTON JONES MAURICE R. KIRKWOOD JOHN KRUEGER WILFRED LUSHER KENNETH MOELLER KARLG. RAHDERT WALTER ROBBINS, Jr. ORAL RICKE Third Row ROBERT SHIMEL WILLIAM A. SPENCER JOHN E. SPRINGER ROGER L. STULL IRVIN SWANSON JAMES B. WOOD ANDREW W. ZIMMER 86 Blue Keu Since the beginning of the intra-state feud be- tween the aggravating academy for aggressive agriculturalists, commonly known as Purdue Uni- versity, and the master minds of our own Univer- sity, Blue Key has taken the initiative in the strug- gle by telling the campus world of the cowardly character of Old Jawn and then proving it by burying him below the soddy surface of the local terrain. This year, as is the custom, one of the illustrious sons of the School of Law was selected to read the final rites before lowering the repulsive remains into the ground. The Reverend Dick Otto Ellis did the job in fine style and the audience was moved to tears — probably because it was rain- ing. However, Blue Key, besides taking care of the remains of the up-state monster, inaugurated a new program this year to try to rid the organiza- tion of the name, the pretty-key club. Under the leadership of Maurice Kirkwood, Sigma Nu rod, the group ate the lowest of the cafeteria calories at its Sunday evening meetings in order to save money. According to Mr. Kirkwood, how- ever, the food-sacrificing program was all in vain after the organization received the bill for the construction of the burial platform for Jawn Purdue. To be eligible for membership in Blue Key, a student must have compiled at least one hundred activity points; must have a scholastic average bet- ter than the all-University average; must be a junior or senior, and must have the endorsement of President Herman B. Wells. Faculty members are C. J. Sembower, Lee R. Norvelle, E. L. Yeager, J. J. Robinson, and A. N. McMillin. JOHN E. SPRINGER President MAURICE KIRKWOOD Vice-President WALT ROBBINS Treasurer 87 Motion, IZocrtd JOAN VEIT President MARY WEINLAND Vice-President MARGARET FARGO Secretary The occasion is Foundation Day. The scene is characterized by beaming faces under the well- known black caps. The baffled freshman ' s one re- mark is, How did they graduate before everyone else? The senior ' s answer is, They aren ' t gradu- ates. They ' re the newly appointed members of Mortar Board. Yes, the black cap with its tassel and the pins of the same design identify twelve of the most active women on the campus. Once a week, usually any noon that the very busy members feel that they can take time out long enough to eat, they have a luncheon in the Mortar Board room on the top floor of the Stu- dent Building. The meeting includes the reading of the minutes of the last meeting, while every- one is eating but the poor recording secretary. The meal is thoroughly enjoyed until the treasurer shouts the oft-used phrase, Have you given your quarter to me? The business of the day begins by the president reminding the committee chair- men of their various projects. One of the more important of these projects is the tutor list which the group publishes each fall. Another is the an- nual Dames Ball, which provides each campus female with a chance to take her A-1 in the Army man dancing. Other projects include the Old Clothes Drive, the proceeds of which are passed on to needy persons, and the distribution of health pamphlets through the Women ' s Resi- dence Halls and sorority houses. The actual aim of this honorary of honoraries for women, however, is to promote the best in- terests of University women in scholarship, leader- ship and activity. Dr. Agnes E. Wells, who estab- lished the chapter in 1921, is the permanent ad- viser. 88 First Row LOIS ARMSTRONG NANCY WARD BIDDLE MARGARET T. FARGO HESTER LOUISE GRAHAM Second Row JANE HUDSON MARY MANN EMMA LUCY PHILLIPP JO ANNE PIERPONT Third Row MADELYN PUGH MARY FRANCES REES JOAN VEIT MILLIE COX VICKERY MARY WEINLAND 89 SpJuwx, GUui KENNETH W. MOELLER President DON DANIELSON Vice-President GENE WHITE Secretary By their hats ye shall know them! formerly was the cry of the campus crowd when one of the stately Sphinx gentlemen passed by. Their day of monopoly on the topper business, however, seems to be over and Sphinx men now are only among the many campus hatted individuals. It has been said that this organization, founded back in 1910 when the Book Nook gang ruled the campus, is so called because such great mys- tery surrounds its excuse for existence. Sitting solemnly and soberly and allowing the shifting sands of the desert to bury them, as the name might seem to indicate, is not the occupation of Sphinx members. Their livelihood is especially noticeable during the half-time intermissions of Conference basketball games, as well as during pep sessions and other invigorating campus affairs. The only time during the year that members of the organization are sure they will meet is the night of initiation ceremonies, usually held in the Phi Delt house. Noted as the roughest and toughest initiation of any on the campus, the prize feature of the evening comes when the neo- phytes are required to swallow ungulpible live goldfish. A famed tradition of the organization is the Table Waiter ' s Ball, sponsored to raise funds for scholarships awarded each year to the two most deserving sophomore men. Other activities include the Dad ' s Day function on the day of the Purdue football game. Members are chosen on the basis of their parti- cipation in extra-curricular activities, and of being goo d fellows as well. Professor J. Edward Hedges and Colonel Raymond L. Shoemaker are faculty advisers. 90 First Row Second Row ROBERT D. ANDERSON CHARLES FEEGER GARZA BALDWIN JACK FEIGHNER DAN BANNISTER CLIF FORSYTH ED BARTLEY ROBERT FRANK AL BRAGALONE BILL FREY DONALD C. DANIELSON ROBERT E. GATES DON DAVIS ED HERBERT Third Row Fourth Row FLOYD HOUSE GLEN E. SMITH ROBERT JOHNSON PAUL SPLITTORFF CAMPBELL KANE IRVIN SWANSON JOHN KRUEGER JIM TRIMBLE BOB LUCAS BOB WHITE KENNETH MOELLER GENE WHITE FRED PFROMMER HOWARD S. WILCOX 91 First Row LOIS ARMSTRONG ELAINE AX NANCY WARD BIDDLE BERYL ANN BROWNELL MARY A. CARSON ELSIE CHALFANT CHARLOTTE COOPER Second Row RUTHE A. EDWARDS MARY ANNETTE ELSNER MARY R. EMAHISER JANE GAFF JEANNE GIFFORD ANNE HOOGE JANE HUDSON Third Row MARCILE A. IRLE BARBARA JOHNSON DORIS KONING DEDE LUNG MARY MANN REBA PENDRY JO ANNE PIERPONT Fourth Row MADELYN PUGH MARY FRANCES REES MADELINE SCULLY ELOISE STUMP PAULINE TAYLOR BETTY TUCK JOAN VEIT 92 Ple Ga i Speaking of sardines, have you ever attended a meeting of Pleiades? With thirty members and only thirteen chairs the traffic often is terrific. The early bird does not get a worm, but in this case a chair. At high noon the girls of this socially outstanding group can be discovered far up in the Student Building eating box lunches from the Commons with either fork or spoon, never both. They say they are not sponsoring a back-to-nature move- ment but merely admit that there just is not enough silverware to go around. On rainy days (two- thirds of the time in Bloomington) and on Thurs- days, the girls blossom out in their well-known gold and blue hats. The members, thirty strong, are chosen for their social prominence, house activities, participation in campus affairs, and personality. Pledges are notified of selection traditionally at the University Pow-Wow banquet and at five-thirty on the morn- ing before the Junior Prom; at least that is what it says in the organization ' s book. However, sev- eral loyal members recently decided the hour much too early for such strenuous activity and other ar- rangements for pledging now have been made. As an organization to foster good fellowship and school spirit, Pleiades, along with Skull and Crescent, sponsors an annual dance conveniently scheduled before final examinations, the purpose being to divert the students ' minds from the fate soon to befall them. The true character of Pleiades was well expressed this year by its Christmas party for the less fortunate children of Bloomington and its suburban districts. A card party in the Com- mons provided the funds. MADELINE SCULLY President CHARLOTTE COOPER Vice-President MARY ANN SAMMS Secretary ■4 T 93 First Row Second Row ROBERT J. ADDISON KEITH COX JAMES B. AUKERMAN SCOTT DANIELS JOHN W. BAILEY WINSTON C. FOURNIER EMILC. BECK ELLIS GODSEY WINSTON BEDWELL CHALMERS L. GOYERT MORRIS BEST HANLY HAMMEL WILIAM LLOYD BRIDGES GENE KERN FRED CASE JACK M. KISTNE Third Row Fourth Row MONROE KOONTZ PAUL SCHWEHN HARRY B. LITTELL JOHN F. SELZER LEON H. LITTLE, Jr. IVAN STOSHITCH WAYNE MINNICK ED STUART JOE PINTER ALLEN J.TREMPER KARLG. RAHDERT URBAN LOUIS UEBELHOER HERSCHEL E. ROCK HARRY WESSELMAN ROBERT J. SABIN CHARLES A. WILSON ROBERT L. WINSLOW 94 fylcvme. Gbih As the wheel of campus politics began its an- nual turn shortly after the beginning of the first semester, the month of November brought to the campus a rejuvenated independent junior and se- nior men ' s political and social organization called the Flame Club. Although recognized on the cam- pus since its beginning in a Book Nook phone booth in 1934, the organization never before con- stituted such a large number of men nor had as one of its main interests, campus political affairs. The boys were not fooling, however, for it was only three weeks later on one bright winter morn- ing, that thirty-one white hats with a red stripe bloomed on the campus. Sphinx Club members were so amazed and worried at the thought of their organization ' s losing prestige that several of them were reported to have begun singing Who ' ll Blow Out the Flame? For more than two years the Flame Club has carried on one of the most sacred of University traditions — that of the never-dying flame that burns continuously under the portrait of Presi- dent Emeritus William Lowe Bryan in the main lounge of the Union Building. New members are initiated at midnight on the anniversary of the lighting of this fire, November 21, 1939. The Flame Club recently introduced the patriotic idea of assessing each member one ten-cent de- fense stamp at each of its bi-monthly meetings. The key of the Flame Club, on which four letters are inscribed, symbolizes the purpose of the or- ganization. The letters are G for God, I for initiative, L for leadership, and F denoting friendship. ELLIS GODSEY President FRED CASE Vice-President WINSTON BEDWELL Secretary 95 Skull and GteAc tit JAMES GADDIS President JOHN A. PARTENHEIMER Vice-President JERRY RANS Secretary LEWIS FERGUSON Treasurer Another of the hat organizations, and one of the first, is the Skull and Crescent, wearers of the orange and green. Established as a sophomore honorary, the organization required, in the days of old, that the rhinies wear their green pods and that no freshman stroll on the Senior Walk by mistake. The last of these decade-old traditions was revived to a limited extent this year when un over-enthusiastic group from the first-year class charged a few of the Skull and Crescent brothers on November 13. The result was not disastrous except that one member of the organization was somewhat embarrassed on looking down and dis- covering that he had been de-panted. Skull and Crescent membership consists of two sophomore men from each fraternity and seven men from the dormitories. These men are selected as the sophomores most likely to succeed in activities and scholarship. Among its many activities, Skull and Crescent sponsors with Pleiades the annual Final Fling the week end before the beginning of final ex- aminations. The organization presents yearly a fifty-dollar scholarship to the outstanding mem- ber of the sophomore class. The group generally manages to indulge in several steak dinners dur- ing the course of the year. The first organization of its kind on the campus, the group was organized in 1922 and boasts of eight chapters in the Big Ten Conference schools. Threatened by other similar sophomore honor- aries, Skull and Crescent continues to maintain its top spot and to hold sway over the activities of erstwhile freshmen rule-violators. 96 First Row Second Row ROBERT L. ANDERSON C. LEWIS FERGUSON DAVID BAERNCOPF NEIL E. FUNK JOHN A. BAXTER JAMES GADDIS ROBERT BENCKART THOMAS GALLMEYER SIDNEY CAHN BUD GIVAN PAULCHIVINGTON FRANK HAMILTON JOHN M. COGAN ROBERT WILLIAM HARGER JAMES DOYLE ROBERT AYRESMacGILL Third Row Fourth Row JACK MEIHAUS WILLIAM J. SIFFIN JACK MORRIS RICHARD M. STEELE GEORGE MURPHY JIMTEDFORD LEWIS E. NOWLAN RICHARD H. TERWILLIGER JOHN PARTENHEIMER MELVIN UNGER JACK RAMSAY WILLIAM VAN FLEIT ROBERT RAPHAEL ROBERT WEISS JACK SALISBURY GORDON R. WILLIAMS 97 Skjma 9ota And in this corner we have the honorary whose members wear the maroon hats with the white bands. Its purpose is to promote better spirit and loyalty among all students toward Indiana Uni- versity, to encourage participation in campus ac- tivities, and to co-operate with all other organiza- tions in campus affairs. Limited to men students who have distinguished themselves in scholarship, attitude, and activities during their freshman year, the group is made up of twenty-four men, eighteen of whom live in the dormitories and six of whom live out in town. It meets on the second and fourth Tuesday of each month and discusses the general business of the organization. The fraternity, whose name stands for Serve Indiana, sponsors an annual Christmas party for eight underprivileged boys in Bloomington. It also participates in all of the University ' s pep sessions and other campus activities concerning service to the University. Because the fraternity was organ- ized only two years ago, as yet it has not been able to establish a scholarship fund. However, a committee spent considerable time this year in- vestigating the possibilities and ways of starting such a fund. The brainchild of Ned Reglein, former head- master of the dormitories, Sigma lota already has established itself on the campus as a service or- ganization even though it was founded in the Men ' s Residence Center only two years ago. Donald Smalley, of the Department of English, is faculty adviser to the group. RALPH LITTLE President MILTON BLICK Vice-President TOM STEPHENSON Secretary 98 First Row MILTON H. BUCK WILLIAM I. CHAPEL DON R. CROKER EDWARD F. EDINGER RICHARD EDWARDS DONALD FARIS Second Row VERNON D. FRAZE JAMES FUTTERKNECHT ROBERT M. GATES WAYNE GOSHORN TOM HUSSEY RALPH LITTLE Third Row NORMAN H. MICHEAL BOB MOORE DONALD MOORE CHARLES MUMAW JERRY O ' NEIL ARTHUR REIMERS MR. SMALLEY Fourth Row THOMAS STEPHENSON ARTHUR THOMAS UPDIKE JAMES VOLPERT WILLIAM WAYNE JAMES C. WHITE WARREN R. WIDMAN JOSEPH A. MILLER 99 First Row: Willard Albright, Wm J David Baerncopf, Bruce Benward, Christ Blassaras, Mark Bowen, = Bernard Bronstein. ■m w i y Second Row: Chilton Brown, Paul Chivington, Alan Dunlap, Ed- %r ward F. Edinger, John Ellett, Jr., J John Erdmann. jgttA Third Row: Vernon D. Fraze, Thomas Gallmeyer, Chalmers L. H Em ' -• - Goyert, Preston Gregory, William L. Haeberle, Robert William Har- Fourth Row: Harold K. Harting, Tom Hussey, Maurice R. Kirkwood, Ralph Little, Wilfred Lusher, Robert L. McClure, Robert Ayres MacGill. Fifth Row: Martin J. Miller, Fred Morris, Charles Mumaw, John R. Pruett, Tom Purky, Henry J. Rankin, Don M. Schlegel. Sixth Row: John Fred Selzer, William J. Sifftn, Louis Sosin, Rich- ard M. Steele, Ed Stuart, James C. White, John D. White. PUi £ta Siatna WILLIAM HAEBERLE President RALPH LITTLE Vice-President MARK BOWEN Secretary A story of success, or how he made the grade, can be applied to members of Phi Eta Sigma, for the fresh- man men who are fortunate enough to be honored by making this organization must have attained a two- point-five average during one or both semesters of their first year. Phi Eta Sigma is a national fraternity and was estab- lished at the University of Illinois in 1923 to promote a higher standard of learning and to encourage high scholastic attainment among freshman men. The local chapter was founded on this campus in 1930. A worthy project of the local chapter is the Coun- sellors ' Corps, a group that spends considerable time in an effort to help first-year men who started out on the wrong foot scholastically. The honorary ' s meetings, of which there are five or six each year, are held in order to plan social functions of the fraternity and to hear speakers from the University faculty. A smoker also is held during the year. Awards given by Phi Eta Sigma during the year go to the sophomore making the highest scholastic average and to the sophomore in Phi Eta Sigma who makes the highest average. Prominent members of the faculty who are members of the organization are President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan and E. C. Billy Hayes, track coach. 100 First Row MARIANNA ASHBY KATHERINE BARRON REBECCA BARTLETT MARTHA BYRNE ELEANOR CONNER RITA MARY COSGROVE Second Row ELIZABETH DEANE MARTHA FETTERLY CHARMAN FRAZEE VIRGINIA HAWLEY ANNE HENDRICKS MARGARET HILLIS Third Row MARJORIE KUHN BETTY LOCKRIDGE DOROTHY J. MAEGERLEIN MARJORIE MILLER PAT MILLER JEANNE MOORE Fourth Row KATHERINE QUALKENBUSH JANE SCHABINGER JEAN SCHABINGER KATHLEEN SIMMONS ESTHER SOSHNICK ROSE JANE SPENCER Fifth Row MARY STEELE RACHEL STONER MARGARET TOWER MIRIAM ELAINE WALTHER BETTY WULFMAN AlpJta Jlamwxa 2 eua RACHEL E. STONER President ANNE HENDRICKS Vice-President ELIZABETH DEANE Secretary If she reads a lot of books, especially textbooks, she probably is a member of the freshman scholastic honor- ary for women, Alpha Lambda Delta. Standing for the highest in scholarship, womanliness, and honor, this organization strives to be unselfish, trustworthy, cour- ageous, and sincere. The first of the thirty-nine national chapters was organized at the University of Illinois in 1924, and the local chapter was established in 1930. The requirements for membership in Alpha Lambda Delta consist of obtaining a B plus average for one or both semesters during the freshman year. At their monthly meetings the girls discuss scholar- ship on the campus as well as current affairs. Members of the local League of Women Voters, Dean Kate H. Mueller, Dr. Agnes E. Wells, and faculty members were guest speakers during the year. Besides helping Mortar Board tutor freshman women, Alpha Lambda Delta also began working on defense projects in January of this year. The organization ' s so- cial program consists of parties and teas, and two ini- tiation breakfasts in the Colonial Tearoom of the Union Building. As a token of scholastic achievement, Alpha Lambda Delta each year awards a gift to the senior girl who maintains the highest average during her four years in the University. 101 AlpJia Gm Skjsna JOHN W. BOEHNE President JOE PEDICINI Vice-President JOHN W. COLGLAZIER Secretary A chemistry major who has survived the aroma of hydrogen sulphide for three years deserves to wear a jeweled pin. The jeweled pin is provided by Alpha Chi Sigma, national organization of chemists. This frater- nity for pestle-wielders was first organized at Madi- son, Wisconsin, in 1908. The aims of the chemical wizards of Indiana are to strive for the advancement of chemistry, both as a science and a profession, and to aid the members by every means in attaining their ambitions as chemists. The twenty-five members are chosen during their sophomore year and they are required to have high standing in their class as well as to be true lovers of their aromatic work. These members meet once a week in the Chemistry Building to hear prominent speakers in their field. Frequently, these meetings are opened to the chemistry-minded public. Each year the name of the senior having the highest class standing is inscribed on a cup which is kept in the chemistry office. Dr. Clarence E. May is faculty ad- viser of the group. It is the goal of the Alpha Chi Sigmas to build a chapter house where the members can preserve the atmosphere of their work. First Row WINSTON BEDWELL THEODORE E. BOCKSTAHLER JOHN W. BOEHNE J. W. COLGLAZIER Second Row EDWARD L. DOERR ED EASTERDAY CHARLES FROHMAN WILLIAM MORRIS Third Row JOSEPH L. PEDICINI WILLIAM C. PITMAN CHARLES A. WESSELMAN RICHARD WITTENBRAKER 102 9oia Stoma Pi ELIZABETH FRASER President DORIS LEE SPAHR Vice-President BETTY BUCHANAN Secretary Do you know that the phrase, What ' s cookin ' ? , is one of the more popular expressions in the chemistry laboratory? It ' s true, and even though members of lota Sigma Pi have been heard using the phrase, the prin- cipal purpose of the organization is to foster an in- creased interest in chemistry among women in industry and allied chemical fields. The organization is a distinct honorary open only to women students with twenty hours of B in chemistry. The Indiana chapter is a member of the national or- ganization which was founded in 1902. The chapters all are named for the elements and Indiana ' s chapter, founded in December of 1929, is called Indium. A six-sided gold key distinguishes members of the or- ganization from all others. With the Greek letters in the center and a diamond and crescent at each end, the key is representative of the two main fields of chemistry. lota Sigma Pi sponsors a tea each fall for all women taking chemistry. Its bi-monthly meetings feature prom- inent guest speakers, and thus afford the members an opportunity to become acquainted with the practical application of chemistry. Mrs. Martha T. Scott, of the Department of Anatomy, is the faculty adviser. First Row ELIZABETH BUCHANAN ELIZABETH FRASER MARGARET E. KELLAR Second Row ANNA KURILOVITCH DORIS LEE SPAHR MRS. MARTHA STRONG 103 St Row: Miss Wells, Mr. Williams, Betty Lockridge, Bernard Kern, Miriam Walther, Thel cond Re iw: Miss Hennel, Jeanette Straub, Mr. Artin, Evar Dare Nering, John Pruett. ird Row : Norma McClintock, Mr. Weyl, Chester Feldman, Mr. Scherk, Miss Stump, Miss urth Ro ' h: Charles Bundy, Ralph Prickett, Miss Howe, Mr. Wolfe, David Vannatta. £fitclideafit Circle and fjusiixvi Math Qlua Any male member of the student body can judge figures and curves, but only students of advanced mathematics can really make use of them. These ad- vanced students compose the membership of Euclidean Circle. Under the leadership of Dr. Cora B. Hennel, round- table discussions, student papers, and various games and problems which require mathematical calculations are presented at the monthly meetings. Two social pro- grams also are given during the year, including a Christmas dinner at the home of Dr. Agnes E. Wells. Officers this year were Bernard Kern, president; Betty Jane Aungst, vice-president, and Norma McClintock, secretary. The Junior Math Club, with Dr. Agnes E. Wells as faculty sponsor, was organized for students interested in mathematics but who have not yet had enough work in the subject to qualify for membership in Euclidean Circle. The organization ' s social activities include a spring picnic and a Christmas party. Officers of the organization were Betty Lockridge, president; Thelma Johnson, secretary; and Unalea Kolb, treasurer. Members of the faculty include Kenneth P. Williams, Emil Artin, Agnes E. Wells, Cora B. Hennel, Harold E. Wolfe, and F. J. Weyl. 104 2)ei 2 etddc ie Ven tit NORMA KUNZ President HELENE BUTZ Vice-President ALICE CRAWFORD Secretary Pictured above is a typical scene from the Christ- mas pageant presented in the Student Building each year by members of Der Deutsche Verein. In addition to this program, the organization also sponsors skits and musical programs at its meetings in an attempt to fur- ther a closer relationship between the students and the faculty of the German department. Students with an active interest in the German lan- guage and with a desire to learn more about the ways and customs of the German people are eligible for membership in the organization. Der Deutsche Verein was founded on the campus in 1911 and since that time has been under the sponsor- ship of members of the faculty of the German depart- ment. Jle Qenxde fyixmcaU MARILYN VICE President ARTHUR WHALLON Vice-President DOROTHY WOLLET Secretary VIOLET WHIPPLE Treasurer Le Cercle Francois, known to those not in the parlez- vous class as the French Club, gives the advanced stu- dents in the department an opportunity to meet each other socially. The meetings, which are held semi- monthly, offer to members practice in French conversa- tion and various other means of widening their ac- quaintance with French speech and customs. The Club has as its aim the application of the work of the class- room to every day social usage, and to promote interest in all things French. Membership in the Club is upon invitation, and the principal requisite is a speaking knowledge of the language. Occasionally, social meetings replace the routine of business. Plays and skits presented by faculty members as well as students make up a considerable part of these programs, also talks by lecturers who have studied abroad or, perhaps, are native Frenchmen. These speak- ers generally elaborate on some interesting phase of life in the home country. Both classical and popular songs are presented and discussed for the musically inclined members. The Club also sponsors various other social activities such as French games and charades which strengthen the friendships formed throughout the year. Faculty sponsors to the organization are members of the Department of French. 105 lieta Qy amsna Stoma C. D. HADLEY. G. A. STEINER. R. E. WALDEN . . . . President Vice-President . . . .Secretary Eugene Clayton Seymour Cohen Philip S. Cooper John D. Danch George E. Deal J. Lloyd Fitzpatrick Orville T. Fox Neal Gilliatt Robert R. Goldstein Chalmers L. Goyert Ernest C. Jones Maurice R. Kirkwood Walter Robbins Manuel F. Rothberg George A. Wagoner J. Byron Aukerman Edward R. Bartley R. W. Douglas Clack Glen W. Coleman Robert E. Collignon Keith W. Cox Hester Graham Mary E. Hendricks Max W. Meyer Richard O. Morris Karl Rahdert Edgar Siegel Bernard F. Trimpe I. W. Aim M. W. Anshen C. W. Barker J. A. Batchelor W. G. Biddle W. T. Buckley G. L. Carmichael E. E. Edwards Elvin S. Eyster Bernita Gwaltney C. D. Hadley J. E. Hedges Sarah D. Kirby H. F. Lusk R. M. Mikesell J. E. Moffat S. A. Pressler A. L. Rickett H. C. Sauvain W. H. Stackhouse G. W. Starr G. A. Steiner R. E. Walden A. M. Weimer H. B Wells The Phi Beta Kappa of the School of Business is Beta Gamma Sigma, scholastic honorary for business students who are in the upper two per cent of the junior class and the upper ten per cent of the senior class. The fra- ternity was founded nationally in 1913 at the University of Southern California and the University of Illinois to recognize scholarship among business students. The Alpha chapter of Indiana was installed at the University in 1923. There now are chapters in practically every school which is a member of the American Association of Collegiate Schools of Business. Among its activities, Beta Gamma Sigma each year places the name of the outstanding business sophomore on the Beta Gamma Sigma scholarship plaque. The award is determined by an examination and the grade standing of the student at the end of his second college year. Another award is the William A. Rawles key which is given to the business student who has the highest average at the end of the first two and a half years. Both of these honors are made public by having the person ' s name inscribed on a name plate and mounted on a board which hangs in the dean ' s office. The plaque-award winner also receives a gold key and the student in second place receives a silver key. 106 First Row: Roger J. Abousomra, Lloyd Ahlf, Gordon M. Allen, James Byron Aukermon, John W. Bailey, Robert A. Baldwin, Emil C. Beck. Second Row: Mark Bowen. George Brickley, Robert H. Bublitz, Jack Leslie Bush, Carl Cheadle, Harold Cook, Ralph Cooper. Third Row: Robert C. Crews, Gene Endress, Richard L. Fisher, Richard B. France, Robert D. Franklin, Harold K. Harting, Fred- erick J. Hartley. Fourth Row: John A. Holdcraft, Donald Holmquist, Delmer P. Hyl- ton, Ernest C. Jones, James H. Jordan, Gene Bernard Kern, James Knight. Fifth Row: John Leininger, Don- ald L. Licking, Glenn Morris, Rob- ert Orr, Richard B. Parker, Paul J. Richey, Walter Robbin. Sixth Row: Ed Stuart, Merrill G. Tucker, Urban L. Uebelhoer, James Volpert, Robert Wheeler, John D. White. Alplva Kappa Pdi JOHN W. BAILEY, tikgmm President ROBERT CREWS . - C Vice-President BENJAMIN F. ROB . Secretary ROBERT S. ANDERSOM Treasurer Business is business so the boys of Alpha Kappa Psi tell us. This organization, the first and oldest com- merce fraternity, was founded at New York University in 1904. It is a charter member of the Professional In- terfraternity Conference, and today there are sixty- three chapters in the United States and Canada. Beta Gamma, the Indiana University chapter, was founded in 1927. The purpose of the organization is the furthering of the interest of business among college men, the promo- tion of scientific research in the field of business, and the education of the public to appreciate and demand higher ideals in business. Among the activities conducted by the general fra- ternity are a placement service, student loan service, an annual efficiency contest, national conventions, and district conferences. The local chapter is very active on the Indiana cam- pus. It sponsors industrial tours, research projects, pro- fessional meetings, informal discussions with the fac- ulty members, smokers, steak fries, and a banquet in the spring and fall for new members. Each year Beta Gam- ma awards a scholarship medallion to the most out- standing senior in the School of Business who has the necessary qualifications to receive it. 107 2 eua Siama Pi DON DAVIS President JACK EASON Vice-President BILL GOOD Secretary JOHN MANNAN Treasurer One of the main objectives of the local chapter of Delta Sigma Pi is to defeat its rival, Alpha Kappa Psi, at baseball when the two get together at a steak fry which is given annually with the faculty of the School of Business as guests. Delta Sigma Pi is one of the largest fraternities in the professional field. It was founded at New York Uni- versity in 1907 with the objective of attaining pre-emi- nence in the field of commerce and business administra- tion. The Alpha Pi chapter was established herein 1925. Among Delta Sig ' s many activities are the maintain- ing of a large and effective alumni organization, the administration of a personnel placement service on a national basis, the publication of a quarterly magazine, and the presentation of a scholarship key each year to the graduating student who has the highest four-year scholastic average in the School of Business. The activities of the local chapter consist of semi- monthly professional meetings, co-operation with the Collegiate Chamber of Commerce, and the sponsoring of industrial tours. Noon lunches, open to all students, are sponsored monthly with faculty members, profes- sional, and personnel men speaking on current affairs. Faculty members of the group include Professors Ed- ward E. Edwards, James Moffatt, Claire Barker, and Harold Lusk. First Row: John Aliman, Edward Bartley, Robert Bernhardt, Len Bunger, Keith William Cox, Don Davis, John C. Eason. Second Row: Donald C. Faris, Charles A. Feeger, James Gaddis, Robert E. Gates, Ellis Basil God- sey, William H. Good, Byrne Hal- let. Third Row: Robert E. Johnson, Sam Johnston, Maurice R. Kirk- wood, Jack Meredith Kistner, Mon- roe Koontz, Walt Lerner, John Allen Mannan. Fourth Row: Richard Leroy Mc- Donald, John Overshiner, John R. Painter, Paul Robert Pressler, Karl G. Rahdert, Jack Ramsay, Robert G. Robb, Paul William Schwehn. Fifth Row: Ben H. Shera, Bob Shimel, Charles Smith, Robert Strawbridge, Roger L. Stull, Robert E. Walda, Edward G. Williams, Gene Williams. 108 McMXZGe He it gmA O+tbuAxmce. Gluhi KARL RAHDERT President CHARLES SMITH Vice-President ANDREW ROBB Secretary JOHN LEININGER Treasurer JOHN R. FEIGHNER President RUSSELL RATCLIFF Vice-President RICHARD McDONALD Secretary RAYMOND BLAKELY Treasurer Completing its second year on the campus, the Man- agement Club is a new honorary making its bid for recognition. Made up of juniors and seniors in the School of Business, the thirty members are management majors or students who are very much interested in the subject. Prominent business men in the field of management meet with the club at its monthly meetings to discuss the problems confronting the business world. Speakers were invited by the group to appear at the Personnel Management Conference which was sponsored on the Indiana campus this year. The club entertains personnel men who visit the School of Business. First Row: John J. Baldwin, Herschel Beasley, Peter Broadbent, Jack F. Brookbank, Robert W. Col- letle, Bob Collignon, Albert Ron- ald Combs, David W. Compton. Second Row: Thomas Fowler, Vernon D. Froze, Robert O. Hall, Jack Kistner, John Leininger, L. Eugene McBride, Billy McKee, Phil- ip Glenn Martin. Third Row: Karl G. Rahdert, Andrew William Robb, DeWayne Royalty, Charles S. Smith, Robert K. Spongier, Ralph Waltz, Norman William Weinstein, Thomas J. Zi- vich. Fourth Row: John B. Bailey, John J. Baldwin, Richard B. Blackwell, Raymond C. Blakely, Robert Bright, Peter Broadbent, Raymond B. Brunner, Kenneth W. Collier, Herbert L. Cramer, John H. Curran. Fifth Row: Robert T. Elliott, John R. Feighner, John D. Hill, Joseph K. Jenkins, Robert E. John- son, Maxwell W. Kamm, Frank A. Layman, John Leininger, William A. Lyon, Richard L. McDonald. Sixth Row: Philip E. Mendenhall, Richard H. Merley, John R. Nel- son, Jerome H. Peters, Russell E. Ratclift, Paul W. Spliltorff, Simon S. Tobian, Richard O. Vollrath, Ed- word G. Williams, James B. Wood. One of the most recent additions to the club life for students of the School of Business is the Insurance Club, organized in the fall of 1940. Designed to focus inter- est of insurance students on problems common to them all, the Club helps its members to learn the most suc- cessful methods to get ahead in an insurance career. Helpful hints from business men are part of the or- ganization ' s programs at luncheon meetings once each month. Luncheon discussions also include insurance in- terests from a vocational standpoint, current problems in the field of insurance, and matters relating to the nature and content of practical insurance curricula. lit i n«i ni n ft £ £ d MiMfoJM c. ft Bo 109 M M First Row: Lloyd Ahlf, Gordon M. Allen, James B. Aukerman, Robert A. Baldwin, Emil C. Beck, Laura Kathryn Briley, Robert H. Bublitz. Second Row: Jack Leslie Bush, John J. Carter, Robert Collins, Har- old Cook, Keith William Cox, Rob- ert C. Crews, Don Davis. Third Row: Donald C. Faris, Art Forquharson, Richard Lewis Fish- er, Robert H. Henderson, Delmor Paul Hylton, Harold Leon Irick, Louis H. Jacobs, Sam Johnston. Fourth Row: Donald L. Licking, Billy A. McKee, Homer A. Mc- Omber, Mildred M. Maddox, Ruth Marks, Allan Mikola, Paul Robert Pressler, Albert M. Price, Jr. Fifth Row: Paul J. Richey, An- drew Robb, Glen C. Smith, Jim Tedford, Urban Louis Uebelhoer, Robert Whisler, Ruth Woliung, William T. Wright. AooountUi4i QImL EMIL C. BECK President DONALD DAVIS Vice-President ROBERT COLLINS Secretary ERNEST C. JONES Treasurer Now in its fifth year on the campus, the Indiana Uni- versity Accounting Club serves as an aid to bring about better relations between students and professors and has tried to further the interest of Accounting students. In accordance with its constitution, this is done by bringing speakers to Bloomington who are employed in the different branches of accounting work, by en- deavoring to interest accounting employers in the ac- counting students at Indiana University, and by promot- ing better student-professor relationships and friend- ships. The aim of the organization in bringing these speak- ers to the campus is to further the students ' interest in accounting by supplementing their work at the Univer- sity with actual business contacts. They maintain a grad- uate placement service in order that accounting em- ployers may place graduates of Indiana University. The Educational Committee of the Indiana Association of Certified Public Accountants has greatly stimulated the activities of the club by its co-operation in the prep- aration of the Accounting Club Program. Meetings are held once a month and an annual ban- quet is given for the members. Faculty members include Alva L. Prickett, Geoffrey L. Carmichael, I. W. Aim, Stan- ley A. Pressler, and Robert E. Walden. 110 Glu Qi ammo, VIRGINIA HAWLEY President HELEN SELEDSOW Vice-President CORRINE HAMILTON Secretary Mary Sabin Grace Jones Betty Bowen Gloria Claman Marjorie Cook Mary Lois Lee Marilyn Seward Kathryn Hickrod Beulah Besing Sheila McHugh Jean Thompson Martha Brahos Jane Loewenthal Beryl Bridge Dorothy Butler Emily Czohara Beth Young Thelma Johnson Jane Gren Lucia Englehart Virginia Denk Marion Lave Irene Sanders Marion Skillman Mary Jane Hackemeyer Sarah McKinley Irene Carson Pat Orrison Mary A. Hawkins Virginia Steel Besse Barich Barbara Ann Byrd Joan Holmberg Eleanor Gilinsky Mary L. LaCluyse Barbara Zoring Jane Ellen Morris Marion Tirmenstein Evelyn Weaver Bonnie J. Augustine Marilyn Moore Patt Galloway Jeanne Estep Jane Moore Mary Florence Miller Marjorie Thompson Roberta Oberding Marjorie L. Ham Constance Huntington Stella Grzywacz Jeanne Scharnberg Barbara Demmary Mary Jane Cook Corrine Hamilton Eleanor Lewiecki Pauline Mead Wanda Bowman Jean McCaughan Pat King Doris Kronborg Virginia Cooper Helen Seledsow Virginia Hawley Defense clinics, including everything from personal traits and character to business etiquette and assets, formed the basis this year for the programs of Chi Gamma, business professional organization for fresh- man and sophomore women in the School of Business. However, Defense Clinics for Young Women was only one of the group ' s aims. Chi Gamma was founded on this campus to foster the study of business, encour- age scholarship, and advance commercial and educa- tional interest of the University ' s women. It endeavors also to promote closer affiliation between the commer- cial world and students of commerce by giving its mem- bers an opportunity to hear persons actively engaged in business. Speech, voice, fashion, style, posture, poise, correct make-up, desirable contacts, and business ethics are but a few of the discussions carried on this year at the organization ' s monthly meetings. Outstanding speakers at these meetings included Dean Arthur M. Weimer, Dr. Agnes E. Wells, and Dr. Catherine Evans. On to better business methods seemed to be the battlecry of the sixty-three members of the organiza- tion throughout the year. Sponsors of Chi Gamma are Miss Lulu Westenhaver, founder of the club, and Miss Sarah Kirby and Mrs. Esther D. Bray. Ill OmicAXHi. 2 eua MARY ELIZABETH HENDRICKS President WILLOUGHBY ALLEN Vice-President DORIS KONING Secretary Omicron Delta is composed of approximately seventy- five junior and senior women students in the School of Business, who will in the near future, they hope, have the mutual problem of preparing home budgets. Now in its fifth year on the campus, the organization was founded by Kathryn Daubenspeck, a senior in the School of Business in 1938. She and a group of junior and senior women in that school organized the Greek letter sorority for the purpose of developing better busi- ness and professional women, to stimulate local organi- zation and co-operation, to gather and distribute in- formation about vocational opportunities, to interest students in business and professional activities, and to further the progress of business through education. The organization meets monthly and hears business men of different vocations talk on subjects of interest in the professional field. Omicron Delta is represented on the Board of Direc- tors of the Collegiate Chamber of Commerce and was instrumental in the reorganizing of Chi Gamma on the campus. Those who have greatly aided in causing the wom- en ' s business honorary to be so highly regarded on the campus are Miss Lula Westenhaver and Mrs. Esther D. Bray of the School of Business, and Mrs. Sarah Kirby, assistant to the Dean of that school. First Row: Willoughby Allen, Joanna Archibald, Rosemary Bai- ley, Evelyn E. Besing, Dorothy El- len Bottorff, Laura Kathryn Bri- ley, Agnes Patricia Brown. Second Row: Emma Lou Cava- naugh, Sue Carter, Helen L. Davis, Virginia Ellerbush, Mary R. Ema- hiser, Ruth Gordon, Jeanne Grif- fith. Third Row: Catherine J. Hanch- er, Mary Kathryn Harris, Margaret Hatala, Mary Ellen Hazel, Mary Elizabeth Hendricks, Rosemary Hendricks, Beatrice Hruskovick. Fourth Row: C. Elizabeth Koll- man, Doris Koning, Norma Lage- naur, Mildred M. Maddox, Ruth Marks, Betty Markert, Mary Louise Millis, Rebecca Anne Morris. Fifth Row: Jean Clare Myers, Marian Myers, Patt Nichols, Mar- garet Nunn, Mary Louise Osborne, Inge Pelikan, Betty Anne Regel. Mary Sailors. Sixth Row: Eleanor Sands, Alice Schafer, Doris Stevens, Anne H. Sullivan, Margaret Torphy, J. Jewel Walters, Ruth Woliung, Em- ily Zankl. 112 Iheta RUTH FROBERG President MARY IRA McELHINNEY Vice-President HELEN PEACOCK Secretary Leonila Badger Mildred Brannon Helene Butz Betty Jane Campbell Mary Carson Margaret Chaille Betty Jeanne Dickerson Ruth Dixon Mary Louise Fountain Betty Jo Gresham Ruth Hamacher Myra Jean Hennon Mary Ina McElhinney Jane McWhinney Mary Mann Mildred Marks Mary Maroney Madonna Moritz Mary Anna Newby Helen Peacock Barbara Rang Peggy Smith Betty Thomson Mary Weinland June Whitman PUi Ibelta KcMitoa ROGER M. SHAW President DONALD L. SIMPSON Vice-President L. E. DYER Secretary CLARK ATKINS Treasurer Members of Phi Delta Kappa, the honorary scholastic organization for men in the School of Education, are selected from the senior class and graduate students after rigid examinations of their scholarship and per- sonal qualifications. The ideals of the organization are scholarship, service, and leadership. Phi Delta Kappa is an active as well as an honorary fraternity. Programs relating to recent developments in educational research are given during the year. The fraternity sponsors the annual Bookmen ' s Picnic and the All-Men ' s Round-Up, which are outstanding events of the Summer Session. Prominent alumni of Phi Delta Kappa are President Emeritus William Lowe Bryan, Dean H. L. Smith, and Dewitt Morgan, superintendent of the Indianapolis city schools. 113 First Row TERRY COONAN RUSSELL FIEDLER CECIL CHARLES FRANKLIN GEORGE DANIEL GERMAIN CARROLL C. GOULD Second Row EDWARD JAMES KUNTZ CARL LAKOSKY LEXIE MILLS JAMES W. REGENFUSS RALPH SEGER Third Row MAX H. SHAW CHARLES H. SUTTON STUART A. ULRICH BOB WENDELN GEORGE D. GERMAIN, JR President LEXIE MILLS Vice-President CECIL C. FRANKLIN, JR Secretary The hop, skip, and jump boys, or those who are sitting on top of the world, as far as taking the newly introduced gymnastic program is concerned, are members of Phi Epsilon Kappa, national professional physical education fraternity. Daily these industrious lads spend their leisure hours doing strenuous exercises and other gymnastic feats that would undoubtedly cause numerous kinks and knots to appear in most stu- dents ' muscles. Founded in 1913 at the Normal College of the Ameri- can Gymnastic Union in Indianapolis, now a part of the University, the local chapter was established on the campus in the fall of 1934. A record of proficient work done in the University Physical Education Department for Men is a qualifica- tion for membership in this fraternity. Members of the group present stunt performances during intermissions at basketball games and also give physical education programs at other campus functions. The organization holds meetings every other month at which lectures are given by coaches of the various University sports and outstanding members of the Physical Education staff of the University. Faculty members of Phi Epsilon Kappa are Professors Sid Robinson and Karl Bookwalter, and Coaches E. C. Hayes and Robert A. Royer. 114 First Row JOHN J. BALDWIN JACK BECKNELL WILLIAM BECKWITH KEITH WILLIAM COX ROBERT WILLIAM HARGER Second Row robert harris claude holmes maurice kendall edward james kuntz fred. l. Mclaughlin Third Row JOHN PARKER MEISTER J. MARTIN MILLER ROBERT J. SABIN JACK SALISBURY Fourth Row GORDON SAVER WILLIAM JOHN SHAKER DONALD SNEPP WILLIAM WAYNE Alpha Pm Omeaa ROBERT WM. HARGER President EDWARD KUNTZ Vice-President DONALD F. SNEPP Secretary Alpha Phi Omega, service fraternity, was founded at Lafayette College by students who felt the need of an organization which would continue the services of the Boy Scout movement through college. The purpose of the group is to assemble college men in the fellowship of the Scout oath and law, to develop friendship, and to promote service to humanity. The only prerequisite for membership is that the candidate be a registered Scout. Thirty-five members of the fraternity meet bi-monthly in the Union Building to hear prominent speakers of the state and to discuss ways of furthering their service to the University. A scholarship is awarded each year to an Eagle Scout who is entering Indiana University. The organization also sponsors a two-day conference of Eagle Scouts in the spring. From all over the state, Eagle Scouts who are seniors in high school meet on the cam- pus, at which time the fraternity awards the scholarship. Dr. C. E. May, Robert Shafer, Dean Herman T. Bris- coe, Karl W. Bookwalter, Thornton Stone, and J. E. Pat- rick are among the advisers of the organization. The lat- ter two were co-founders of this important service fra- ternity. 115 CfGMfuna £ta Qcunma STEVE LEONARD Chancellor GLEN RAMSEY Vice-Chancellor CHARLES MACKRES Quaestor WILLIAM ADAMS Treasurer Within the vine-covered walls of Maxwell Hall, head- quarters for all self-respecting law students, is Gamma Eta Gamma, professional law fraternity, founded at Indiana University in 1912. Organized to establish in this and other schools of law, as well as in the general practice of the profes- sion, an elevated standard of professional deportment, a high code of professional ethics and a broad devel- opment of mental culture and moral character . . . , the organization is one of thirty-three chapters in the various law schools throughout the United States. A part of the legal brotherhood ' s annual activities is a get-acquainted smoker for freshmen law students to familiarize them with the purpose of the fraternity and with the Gamma Eta Gamma members. The annual reunion banquet on the campus in No- vember is a gala event attended by many prominent men in the legal profession. The Founders ' Day celebra- tion, called the Prandium Cancellarii, conducted on Feb- ruary 25, also is a highlight of the fraternity ' s activi- ties each year, a red-letter day on its social calendar. Guest speakers are featured at the bi-monthly lunch- eon of the organization. In addition, affairs of current interest are discussed at the meetings. 116 First Row: Bob Good, William Bloom, Harold Stump, Charles Barnhill, Maurice A Weikert, Hugh G. Freeland, Myles Parrish, J ' . David Mann. Second Row: Robert Austin, John G. Clerkin, A. Morris Hall, Orville T. Fox, John Chappell, Richard Wathen. Third Row: Robert L. Harmeier, John D. Widaman, Gilmore S. Haynie, William C. Moore, John R. Danch, John W. Houghton, Don Wollet. Fourth Row: Bud Mills, J. Lloyd Fitzpatrick, John R. Purcell, Bob Gettinger, Francis E. Knowles, Richard E. Datler, Robert Taylor. Plu %elta Plu WILLIAM M. BLOOM President CHARLES J. BARNHILL Exchequer HAROLD STUMP Clerk MAURICE WEIKART Historian Harboring Indiana ' s monks, the law students, is the imposing Maxwell Hall, and an active group within these sacred walls is Phi Delta Phi, professional fra- ternity. Organized to combat corrupt legal practices and to promote strict adherence to a code of professional ethics and culture in the law profession, the fraternity is divided into chapters known as Inns, so named for the old English Inns of Court. The first Inn was estab- lished at the University of Michigan in 1869, while the local chapter, called Foster Inn, was founded in 1900. Guest speakers advise and entertain members of the fraternity at the bi-monthly luncheons of the group. At the regular meetings, discussions also are conducted on various points of legal interest which usually are not discussed in the law classes. Members of Phi Delta Phi also act as a welcoming committee for freshman law students by sponsoring a smoker each year to acquaint the new members of the monastery with their future colleagues. Among prominent alumni of the club are Paul V. McNutt, Federal Security Administrator; Judge George L. Tremain, of the Indiana Supreme Court, an honorary member; Judge Curtis G. Shake, also of the State Su- preme Court; and Bernard C. Gavit, dean of the Uni- versity ' s School of Law. 117 First Row MILDRED ALLGIRE HELEN BURTON SEBRA ELLEN COX EDNA M. DeBRULER ANNA JO FOLEY Second Row PHYLLIS GOSHORN EILEEN HILL ALICE HILLERMAN BETTY JANE KOSANKE SVEA LINDQUIST Third Row CONTI MICHELENA DONNA MUMMERT AGNES PRIKOSOVITS ANNABELLE VARGYAS ?. A. euL PHYLLIS L. GOSHORN President REBECCA BEALE Vice-President MARY E. DAY Secretary When and if the government begins to draft women, this group especially will be interested — and probably will be among the first to be called. However, the twenty-two graduate registered nurses who make up the R.N. Club already have been helping the good Uncle by contributing their services to local Home Nurs- ing classes. Urging one hundred per cent membership in the Red Cross nursing service is another way in which they are doing their part. Organized four years ago when the School of Edu- cation first offered the B.S. degree in nursing, the group hopes some day to build a chapter house and to become a national organization. Its main purpose is to foster mutual helpfulness and a greater unity among the reg- istered nurses on the campus, all of whom are working toward the B.S. degree. Obtaining that degree will enable them to be public health nurses, teachers of health education, or instructors in other Schools of Education. Meeting once a month, the organization strives to keep up with the advancements of their profession and, besides social meetings, has professional meetings with speakers from both on and off the campus. And this is one group of women who really know what they are talking about when they get started on operations! Mrs. Bessie F. Swan acts as the sponsor of the club. 118 Skeleton Gluh BEN WILSON President FRANK THORNBURG Vice-President CORA ZASER Secretary The Skeleton Club is so called because it ought to be kept in a closet. All the boys studying medicine, or in danger of it, are expected to become members of the organization. The idea is to give the medics a chance to make some friends before they leave school, working on the theory that if the medics are allowed to discuss their vertebraes and intestines at will for an extended period, it will improve the conversation and appetites at various eating houses. Attempting to broaden the knowledge of its mem- bers, the Club has discussions of various medical prob- lems at its meetings every three weeks. The group also endeavors to band its members together socially, and for this purpose it sponsors numerous recreational ac- tivities including an annual spring dance and a number of picnics. In addition, the club each year places a team on the gridiron to battle the law students in a blood- thirsty struggle. The organization, with its one hundred forty-four members, attempts also to function as a medium for student opinion in an effort to settle questions of policy left for student decision. To encourage persons to dis- cuss such questions as well as problems of the profes- sion, the Skeleton Club maintains a lounge on the first floor of the Medical Building. 119 First Row DON DAVIS ROBERT E. FRANK ROBERT E. GATES MAURICE R. KIRKWOOD Second Row KENNETH MOELLER ALEXANDER F. MUIR KARLG. RAHDERT EUGENE GEORGE WHITE hnaaosA Jleadl KENNETH MOELLER President MAURICE KIRKWOOD Vice-President EUGENE WHITE Secretary KARL RAHDERT Treasurer One of the most honorary of honoraries is Dragon ' s Head, the organization whose only purpose is to devour T-bone steaks and listen to active members tell stories of students way back when. Dragon ' s Head has no dances, monthly meetings, or services performed. It sponsors no milk fund, gives no benefits for relief funds, and gives no excuse for its existence. It is in this fact that lies its chief claim to cam- pus fame. The reason for this is, undoubtedly, that the B.M.O.C. ' s of which it boasts would have no time to participate in them. The organization meets twice each year at which time it has its induction banquets. Members pledged in the fall have the advantage over those taken in in the spring in that they get two steak dinners for the price of one. This is attributed to the fact that pledges are given the privilege of paying for all dinners. Dubbed the honorary for honoraries, the group boasts only the biggest and best of campus rods. To be eligi- ble, one must be a senior and must have attained none but the highest ranking in prominent extra-curricular activities. As such, a member must be a captain of a major athletic team, editor or executive officer of a ma- jor publication, or president of one of several organi- zations. 120 :; « Dwelling in the most elaborate of campus castles are the lads of the Men ' s Residence Center. Built of Indiana limestone and furnished in the latest style, the Center contains a huge dining room, library, two large lounges, the quarters of the resident Headmaster, general office, and high in the tower, the Senate Chamber. The Men ' s Residence Center operates under a form of student government. The principal governing body of the Halls is the Student Senate, consisting of three members from each of the seven units of the dormitories, in addition to the presi- dent, business manager, and social chairman. The individual units have their local official bodies made up of a governor, secretary, treasurer, freshman representa- tives, and representatives-at-large. The chief administrative officer of the dormitories is the Headmaster, who, with the assistance of seven graduate Fellows, co-ordinates various activities of the units and serves as a guidance counsellor of the entire dormitory system. This year, Ernest Sam Brown is the Headmaster. He replaced Ned Reglein, who was called into the armed forces last year. Originally, South Hall, constructed in 1924, was the only dormitory for men on the campus. However, in 1939, North and West Halls were added to help house the increasing number of students entering the University. Activities of the Halls include two big dances each year at which name bands play, exchange dinners with women ' s halls and social sororities, informal parties, and participation in intramural athletic contests. (Around Ihe table from left to right) Joe Kishel; Gene Kern; Arnold Kunkler; Harry Wesselman; Steve Best; Gene Newby; Nickolas Angel; Fred Robinson; William Schimpff, business manager; Leon Little, president; John Krueger, social chair- man; Arnold Russo; Robert Hoss; Charles Wilson; Herschel Rock; George Lamb; Robert E. Johnson; James C. White; Gerald Rans. 122 (Top) Headmaster Sam Brown (cente r) talks about not-so-serious matters with the officers of the M.R.C. . . . Hm — must be a good story . . . Those early morning must-dos. (Middle) Come on, boys, let ' s sing another . . . You can tell at a glance that this is just an old-fashioned boress. (Bottom) There ' s nothing better than a moment to spare and a paper to read . . . What goes on here? . . . Relaxing with records and reading. 123 At UU oKall BOB JOHNSON Governor MARVIN LAGENOUER Secretary FRED ROBINSON Treasurer ufan JtauAa First Row: EUGENE SENSENY, Soph., Ft. Wayne; PETER IACINO, Soph., Farrell, Pa.; SAM POSTLEWAITE, Soph., Hammond; JOHN T. KIELY, Soph., Anderson; DON KRUEGER, Soph., Indianapolis; TONY FILEFF, Fr., Gary; BERNARD PORACKY, Fr., Whiting; MICHAEL GOVORKO, Fr., Mishawaka; RICHARD GOBLE, Soph., Greenfield; WILLIAM L. HAEBERLE, Soph., Indianapolis; EBEN HENSON, Fr., Danville, Ky. Second Row: BOB MATTHEW, Fr., Anderson; ROBERT SHAW, Soph., Rosedale; IRVING L. DENTON, Fr., Elkhart; NICK V. ANGEL, Soph., East Chicago; JIM SHAW, Fr., Gary; AL DESMOND, Soph., Indianapolis; JOHN KRUEGER, Senior, Gary; JOHN F. HAYMOND, Soph., Wal- dron; LOUIS L. GLUCKSMAN, Fr., New York, N.Y.; WILLIAM CARROLL, Fr., New York, N.Y.; ELLIOT BESUNDEE, Soph., Asbury Park, N.J.; FRED- ERICK J. HARTLEY, Soph., Muncie; ROBERT E. JOHNSON, Sr., La Porte. Third Row: BOB LEVIN, Fr., Indianapolis; DON ROUTT, Fr., South Bend; DAN BAKER, Fr., Marietta, Ohio; PALMER SKAAR, Soph., Indi- anapolis; JOHN McCAY, Fr., LaPorte; BERNARD A. MIRICH, Fr., Gary; ROBERT E. BROWN, Fr., Mamaroneck, N.Y.; EDWARD BROWN, Fr., Gary; WILLIAM L. CHANEY, Fr., Montpelier; JAMES M. McNAMARA, Fr., Gary; RALPH VOGEL, Fr., Hammond; JAMES YODER, Fr., South Bend. Fourth Row: WILLIAM EGLY, Fr., South Bend; WILLIAM M. BAKER, Fr., Muncie; JACK E. KIEWIT, Jr., New Albany; MANUEL C. ABASCAL, Fr., Gary; JAMES KERINS, Fr., Farrell, Pa.; JOHN EDMISTON, Fr., Gary; JOHN VANATTA, PG, Brookston; JAMES VOLPERT, Soph., Peru; ROB- ERT MOORE, Soph., Celina, Ohio. CHARLES WILSON Governor HERSCHEL ROCK Secretary GEORGE LAMB Treasurer 3 %aAe Jlaule First Row: BILL WHITAKER, Fr., Scotland; JOHN DICKEY, Soph., Brook; DONALD C. GRAY, Soph., Indianapolis; PAUL CHASMAN, Fr., Indi- anapolis; STANLEY F. HASSE, Fr., Indianapolis; SAUL GANZ ' , Soph., Marion; BASIL PADDOCK, Fr., Richmond; CLARENCE E. DARKUS, Fr., South Bend; BUD ROEDER, Fr., Webster Groves, Mo.; PAUL TRUMAN, Fr., Plymouth; BOB HELMS, Fr., Plymouth. Second Row: ROBERT W. DENMAN, Fr., Gary; KIRIL K. LIAPTSCHEFF, Fr., Indianapolis; CHARLES PATERNA, Soph., Elizabeth, N.J.; DON R. CROKER, East Chicago; WAYNE D. GOSHORN, Soph., Elkhart; HERSCHEL ROCK, Jr., New Paris; CHARLES A. WILSON, Jr., Indianapolis; GEORGE WINTON LAMB, Jr., Mount Summit; THOMAS M. SHALSES, Fr., Plymouth; JOHN W. SNYDER, Jr., Williston, N.D.; BILL BROWN, Fr., Celina, Ohio; BILL RITCHIE, Fr., Evansville. Third Row: WILLIAM R. ARMBRUSTER, Fr., Richmond; IRVING A. WEINBAUM, Fr., Ellenville, N.Y.; EUGENE McCLOSKY, Soph., Valparaiso; NORMAN K. HARTMAN, Fr., South Bend; DONALD L. TRENNEPOHL, Fr., Indianapolis; WILLIAM ALBRIGHT, Soph., Bedford; FRANKLIN LETT, Fr., Bunker Hill; BOB MIDKIFF, Fr., Knightstown; JOHN R. ENDWRIGHT, Jr., Orleans; CHARLES PARKS, Fr., French Lick; ARTHUR W. REIMERS, Soph., Wheeler; ROBERT SCHWARZ, Fr., Webster Groves, Mo. ARNOLD RUSSO Governor GENE NEWBY Secretary ARNOLD KUNKLER Treasurer G dztiUftan JlouAa First Row: EUGENE LUDWIG, Fr., Kokomo; JAMES BAKER, Jr., Ligonier; JOE CARLISLE, Fr., Michigan City; BOB RIDGELY, Fr., Gary; DON WALSTRUM, Soph., Whiting; RAYMOND M. SKONY, Fr., East Chicago; WILLIAM E. GREENE, Jr., Sanborn; RICHARD M. ANDERSON, Soph., Indianapolis; WALTER A. MARTINSEN, Fr., La Porte; THOMAS XANDERS, Fr., Syracuse; DANIEL S. HARSH, Jr., Bluffton. Second Row: KENNY HARVEY, Soph., Indianapolis; GEORGE BONER, Fr., Butlerville; BILL MISCH, Soph., Gary; BOB MEHILOVICH, Soph., Gary; BOB BIBLER, Soph., Muncie; ARNOLD KUNKLER, Jr., St. Anthony; ARNO RUSSO, Sr., Indianapolis; LUCIEN A. W. GAMBINO, Fr., Berwyn, III.; SIDNEY LEE, Jr., Osage, W.Va.; NICK YONCLAS, Fr., Willimantic, Conn.; BILLY BURGER, Fr., Noblesville; CHARLES SMITH, Fr., Indianapolis; ROBERT GUMBINEU, Fr., Gary. Third Row: SEYMOUR M. BAGAL, Fr., Brooklyn, N.Y.; WARREN R. WIDMAN, Soph., New Albany; RICHARD HASLER, Fr., Newberry; JOHN LLOYD, Sr., Brazil; ROSS WILLIAMS, Soph., Ligonier; RALPH M. STEFFY, Soph., Logansport; BOB PARKINSON, Soph., Yorktown; ROBERT BUB- LITZ, Soph., Gary; WILLIAM WALTER, Soph., Gary; RYAN BERKELEY, Fr., Chesterton; MARTIN ROSEN, Fr., Brooklyn, N.Y.; ROBERT MOSES, Jr., Worthington. Fourth Row: MAX ALLISON, Fr., Kokomo; ALAN LOWENSTEIN, Soph., Deal, N.Y.; JIM McDONALD, Fr., Shelbyville; EDWARD H. EDWARDS, Soph., Kokomo; ROBERT AUSTIN, PG, Anderson; THOMAS TENELL, Fr., Buffalo, N.Y.; JAMES YOUNCE, Fr., Ft. Wayne; MICHAEL SABAN, Fr., LaGrange, III.; DONALD MOORE, Soph., Tipton; ALA N COHEN, Fr., Tarrytown, N.Y. 125 Jdif di Gentesi JOE KISHEL Governor JERRY RANS Secretary JAMES WHITE Treasurer First Row: ROBERT PENNINGTON, Fr„ Indianapolis; JAMES KUYKENDALL, Fr., West Terre Haute; CARL FALLER, Fr., Granville, Ohio; PETE PIKOS, Fr., Chicago, III.,- JERRY RANS, Soph., Elkhart; JOE KISHEL, Sr., Nanticoke, Pa.; JOHN EICHOLZ, Fr., New Albany; ALEX AZAR, Soph., Ft. Wayne; HAROLD FLOX, Fr., Columbia City; ALVIN BRAILLIER, Fr., Warsaw. Second Row: RUSSELL MASTERS, Fr., Indianapolis; JOHN MATTHEWS, Fr., Indianapolis; EARL RIGGLE, Fr., Speed; JAMES PRESSER, Fr., Indianapolis; CHARLES ALLING, Fr., Indianapolis; RALPH HEDGES, Fr., Odon; CHARLES McMAHON, Fr., Louisville, Ky.; JAMES MURPHY, Soph., Ft. Wayne; MAX MAGNER, Jr., Ft. Wayne; ROBERT RINEHART, Soph., Logansport; RICHARD BRIDGES, Soph., Ft. Wayne; DANA MOCK, Sr., South Bend. Third Row: KENNETH CLARK, Fr., Whiteland; JOHN TAVENER, Soph., Granville, Ohio; CHADW1CK JULIAN, Fr., Fowler; LELAND CHAND- LER, Fr., Friendship; ROBERT TOWNS, Fr., Warsaw; WALTER HARRISON, Soph., Shelbyville; THURL BARR, Soph., Marion; DON CHRISTENA, Jr., Indianapolis; JOE ZUZGA, Fr., Campbell, Ohio; ED ELLIOTT, Fr., Martinsville. Fourth Row: JAMES FUTTERKNECHT, Soph., Mishawaka; RICHARD VORIPAIEFF, Fr., N.Y.; WILLIAM MATTHEWS, Fr., Indianapolis; HAR- OLD STUMP, PG, Auburn; JAMES WHITE, Soph., Elwood; MERTON BROOKS, Soph., Indianapolis; DAVID MIDDLETON, Fr., Indianapolis; DUD- LEY CHASE, Soph., Logansport. (lileif Mgm i BOB ADDISON Governor KEN RHODE Treasurer First Row: JACKSON ROGERS, Soph., Indianapolis; RICHARD SMITH, Fr., Rochester; ROBERT SQUIRE, Soph., Lyons; NORMAN MICHEL, Soph., Tipton; CHARLES KELSEY, Fr., LaPorte; ISRAEL CAPLITZ, Fr., Chelsea, Mass.; ROBERT AGNEW, Fr., Greencastle; KARL MISHLER, Soph., Shipshewana; ROBERT ANDERSON, Fr., Indianapolis; HAROLD SELTZER, Soph., New York, N.Y. Second Row: VAN JANEWAY, Fr., Detroit, Mich.; SAUL FLOX, Soph., Columbia City; ROBERT BULLOCK, Soph., South Bend; THOMAS LEVI, Jr., Jackson, Mich.; MALCOLM LEVI, Fr., Jackson, Mich.; LEWIS PUTHOFF, Fr., Richmond; CASPER BENENATI, Fr., Baldwin, N.Y.; LOUIS BLAKE, Fr., LaPorte; ROBERT CLEGG, Soph., Morristown; ROBERT BRYAN, Soph., Marion; ROBERT HOSS, Jr., Kokomo; GEORGE TOUMA, Jr., Port Huron, Mich. Third Row: ROBERT GATES, Soph., Elkhart; CHARLES YORK, Fr., Newberry; HOWARD LEGUM, Fr., Brooklyn, N.Y.; RAYMOND FRY, Fr., Gary; ARTHUR MILLIS, Fr., Indianapolis; WALTER CORY, Fr., Hagerstown; JOHN DROEGE, Jr., Seymour; GERALD KASTING, Fr., Indianapolis; JOHN GRAHAM, Fr., Kokomo. 126 Baulk cticul 127 Wed JlaU 128 AL TREMPER Governor HARRY OVERESCH Secretary HARRY WESSELMAN Treasurer Jiaule ajf JlosiAl First Row: ROBERT HANSEN, Soph., Princeton; WILLIAM CASSIDY, Fr., Princeton; ROBERT FRESEN, Soph., Chicago; DONALD BOWLES, Jr., Indianapolis; WILLIAM A. MANIS, Fr., Indianapolis; JAMES D. WHITE, Fr., Indianapolis; GEORGE MORTON, Jr., Soph., Gary; A. O. La- BERTEAUX, Jr., Fr., Muncie; RICHARD LANDWERLEN, Fr., Shelbyville; JOHN R. WEBSTER, Soph., Kentland; DAVID C. HAY, Fr., South Bend; JOHN R. FUNK, Jr., Kentland. Second Row: MORTON A. GELLMAN, Fr., Indianapolis; HARRY B. OVERESCH, Jr., Lafayette; ROBERT V. BROWN, PG, Velpen; CHARLES M. PARKER, Soph., Linden; RALPH LITTLE, Soph., Linden; TED HODUPS. l, Soph., East Chicago; GEORGE B. SLICK, Fr., Gary; LOUIS H. JACOBS, Sr., Bedford; JOHN G. SPONSEL, Fr., Gary; MAX W. RICHARDS, Fr., Terre Haute; CHARLES R. WADE, Sr., Frankfort; RALPH HUBLEY, Fr., Whit- ing; CRAIG PEPER, PG, Carmel; ROGER BRADNER, Fr., Evansville; JAMES WHITESIDE, Soph., Speed; VINCENT LAMBO, Sr., Elkhart; CHARLES A. WESSELMAN, Sr., Evansville; EDDIE KUNTZ, Jr., South Bend. Third Row: THOMAS HUSSEY, Soph., Martinsville; ROBERT F. SAXTON, Fr., Bath, New York; ADDISON E. RIEPE, Sr., Evansville; RICH- ARD G. LONG, Fr., Indianapolis; LADDIE MARIN, Soph., Kokomo; WALTER JOHNSON, Jr., Culver; WEIR MITCHELL, Jr., In dianapolis; WIL- LIAM R. BAUGH, Sr., Evansville; HARRY BRAMMER, Fr., Indianapolis; JACK W. DURICK, Fr., Whiting; GUY CORIDEN, Sr., Hammond; HARRY WESSELMAN, Sr., Evansville. Fourth Row: ART SAMPSEL, Fr., Bunker Hill; JERRY O ' NEIL, Soph., Hammond; THOMAS B. EVERITT, Fr., Scottsburg; MANUEL PRICE, Jr., Mishawaka; K. EDWIN APPLEGATE, Fr., Winamac; JOE W. BEGLEY, Jr., Evansville; BOB W. MAXEDON, Jr., Evansville; J. DAVID MANN, PG, Nashville, III.; DONALD H. WRIGHT, Soph., Evansville; JOE P. ARVIN, Jr., Indianapolis; THOMAS G. STEPHENSON, Soph., Ft. Wayne; WILLIAM A. CARTWRIGHT, Soph., Ft. Wayne; CHARLES BATES, Sr., Connersville; J. T. ESMON, Sr., Indianapolis; WILLIAM PRICE, Fr., East Chicago. STEVE BEST Governor GENE KERN Secretary MARSHALL HANLEY Treasurer jdinooln Jl uAe First Row: JACK SONNEVELD, Fr., Chicago, III.; MORRIS BEST, S.-., New Albany; TOM HERRIN, Jr., Indianapolis; RUSSELL HARRELL, Jr., Indianapolis; JOHN PAULSON, Jr., South Bend; JOE WILER, Soph., Logansport; J. D. GARBER, Fr., Middlebury; KEITH CLARY, Jr., Logansport; ED SEITZ, Fr., Indianapolis; HAL BRIDGE, Sr., Tipton; ALEX LORCH, Fr., New Albany. Second Row: CHARLES MUMAW, Soph., Kokomo; GENE KERN, Sr., Oakville; JOE WILKERSON, Jr., Valley Station, Ky.; LAMONT JEN- NINGS, PG, Indianapolis; RONALD LITTLE, Jr., Hillsdale; ROBERT COWDRILL, Soph., Indianapolis; MAX TURLEY, Soph., Zionsville; STEWART RICHARDSON, Fr., Gary; DELMER HYLTON, Sr., Indianapolis; DAVE HOELSCHER, Jr., Richmond; BILL FOTHAS, Soph., East Chicago; ERNEST RHOADS, Fr., Crawfordsville; RONALD JOERS, Fr., Michigan City. Third Row: BILL HANSON, Fr., La Porte; JACK GABLE, Sr., New Albany; MILAN DUDAS, Sr., Whiting; ROY COBB, Fr., Whiting; JAMES JORDAN, Jr., Lynn; VICTOR SELF, Jr., Brazil; CALVIN PORTER, Soph., Stoughton, Mass.; JERRY SCHWARTZ, Fr., Long Beach, N. Y.; RICHARD MILLER, Soph., Ft. Wayne; JONATHAN HOUCK, Fr., Reelsville; DONALD BUCKOUT, Fr., Perrysburg, Ohio; BILL MURPHY, Jr., Huntington, W.Va. Fourth Row: ERNEST KERN, Sr., Oakville; EDWARD BERMAN, Fr., Indianapolis; WILLIAM DUGGER, Sr., Franklin; JOE JAMES, Fr., Aus- tin; PAUL SCHNECK, Fr., Seymour; BOB JAY, PG, Indianapolis; BILL SEAMAN, Jr., Taylorville, III.; FRANK TALBOTT, Fr., Oxford; JUSTIN BURSLEY, Fr., Porter; ROBERT BLACKBURN, Sr., Lawrenceburg; ROBERT SABIN, Sr., Dana; ARNOLD JOERS, Fr., Michigan City. 129 lieeclt Jtall JANE TYNER President HELEN CODY Vice-President IRENE RISLEY Secretary ALICE APPLEGATE Treasurer (Above) Bottom row: Lynn, Hansen, Applegate, Cody, Jackson, Pace, Clamen, Stiefler. Second row: Grayson, Leakey, Blickens- derfer, Redman, Levy, Risley. Third row: Miss Woelky, Valentine, Tordella, Pool, Bowman, McCaughan, Dewend. Fourth row: Griesel, House, Hickrod, Whitacker, Shultz. Fifth row: Kurtz, Glick, Newby, Craig, Spradling, Smart. (Below) Bottom row: Woytovich, Townsend, Ricci, Ham, Toth, Amos, Huffer, Rice, Houston, Bauer, Marques. Second row: Oskard, Tyner, McQueen, Huntington, Wasserman, Glogas, Fry, Robison. Third row: Koskinen, King, Kiwak, Clay, Barth, Hartzer, Doolittle, Lowell, Seledsow, Hildenbrant, Miss Taylor. Fourth row: Miss Woelky, Elmore, Archibald, Spencer, Barten, Mitchell, Reese, Paes, Bowen, Galloway. Fifth row: Rahleder, Curtis, Brown, Lockridge, Hogge, Grabow, Trotter, Enders, Snapp, Augustine, McGuire, Decker, Browning, Worden. 130 Beech Hall, which houses dining rooms for Memorial and Sycamore Halls in addi- tion to its own, is the hub of activity for the Women ' s Residence Halls. For social sessions, Beech features informal relax teas during final exam weeks and has tea dances in between, just for fun. Then there is the traditional Senior-Valentine formal dinner, with gifts for the graduating coeds, not to mention the hot coffee sessions after the home football games. And last but not least, the Beech Hall girls sponsor a Christmas party for a group of children from neighboring grade schools, and in the spring and fall hold picnic suppers on the back terrace, and sunbathe on the front terrace. The Hall boasts of the presence of Elza Marques, exchange student from South America, who already is famous on the campus for her piano concerts. They also are proud of Patt Galloway and Donna Jean Curtis, who were among the final twenty-five in The 1942 Arbutus beauty contest. (Left): Rohleder, Archibald, Hogge, Tyner, Risley. (Right) Sealed: McGuire, McCain, Rice. Standing: Grabo 131 fyan ti JtaU MARGUERITE REEVES President LEONA MENZE Vice-president CARRIE HUFFMAN Secretary MARTHA ELLEN BALES Treasurer Constructed six years ago and located in the northwest corner of the dormitory quadrangle is For- est Hall, the home of high scholarship and innumer- able activity girls. However, the girls include in their curricula not only study but also formal dances, a tea for faculty members, and a monthly pajama party. The Forest Folio, published by the girls, in- cludes numerous informal shots as reminders of the year ' s dances and parties. Two prominent Forest Hall women have helped maintain the high scholastic average of this group by being members of Phi Beta Kappa. The first is Emma Lucy Phillipp, who, besides receiving this high recognition for scholarship, is a member of Mortar Board, Board of Standards, Alpha Lambda Delta, and is president of Le Cercle Francois, chairman of the Student Government Committee, and a member of the Y.W.C.A. Cabinet. The second is Joan Pierpont, who is a wearer of the blue and gold cap of Pleiades, a member of Tau Kappa Alpha, Mortar Board, Alpha Lambda Delta, and who is also president of the His- tory Club and a Coed Counselor. Other prominent Forest Hall girls high in campus activities are Jane Hudson, who is a member of Mortar Board, the Y.W.C.A. Cabinet, Pleiades, University Glee Club, and the A.W.S. Council; and Betty Jane Aungst, who is vice-president of Euclidean Circle, treasurer of the Education Club, a member of the Junior Math Club, and a Y.W.C.A. Coed Counselor. 132 (Above) Bottom row: DeLeon, Shields, Stopp, Howard, Howard, Thompson, Collins, Jenssen, Lutes, Essex, Latshaw, Peacock, Bond, Wiggins. Second row: Reeves, Williams, LaCluyse, McKay, Kalafat, Milks, Harris, Allison, O ' Neal, Bell, Soshnick, Creason, Browning, Bronson, Stover. Third row: Canatsey, Weekly, Myer, Hawkins, Bowlby, Glover, Pace, Huffman, Aungst, Prestrud, Graham, Menze. Fourth row: Lewis, Sheridan, Bartlett, Martin, Nesson, Walk, Denny, Henderson, Allen, Zaring, Kampschaefer, Davis, Drebert. Fifth row: Millis, Stevens, Ordung, Walthers, Held, Price, Harms, Davis, Stoeckel, Tucker, Bales, Meyer, Peterson, McGinniss, Strain. (Left) Bottom row: Hoffman, Sheridan. Top row: Ordung, Reeves, Menze, Bales, Wolfe. (Right) Williams, Weekly, Barker, O ' Neil. 133 (Upper left) Seated; Wallace, Buzolich, Wall. Standing: Wiseman. (Upper right): Schutland, Barick, Hatala, Holmberg, Vidinghoff, McMillan. (Middle left) : Bruce, Corn, Jones, Slominski, Heath, Rowen. (Middle right): Moon, Fitzpatrick, Wolf. Seated: Millen. (Lower left): McCormick, Schroeter, Pottinger. Standing: Overpeck. 134 Mem Ucd Mail The archway of Memorial Hall is the entrance to the court around which are clustered the three other dormitories, equipped to serve six hundred eighty- four students. Memorial was the first of the four to be constructed and it was the realization of a dream by Dr. Agnes E. Wells, former Dean of Women, who for years had foreseen the need of a unit to house University women. Since its construction, the Collegiate Gothic pat- terned dormitory has stood as a guide with its four familiar towers representing Education, Service, Re- ligion, and Recognition. Particularly interesting pastimes of the residents of Memorial include boresses in the elevator between floors, lounging in the front yard in the fall and spring, and gathering in the dormitory ' s smoker lo- cated on the top floor. One of the more sentimental touches of Memorial is a bronze plaque, located in the middle of the stone floor beneath the archway, honoring the Uni- versity women who served their country during the first World War. Social activities of this hall include various teas, dances, and pajama parties, and a dinner honoring the graduating seniors. Always a place of activity, the dormitory takes on a highly political atmosphere when Junior Prom Queen election time rolls around. East Memorial MARGARET HATALA President ELIZABETH McMILLAN Vice-President DOROTHY SCHEITLIN Secretary BESSEE BARICH Treasurer West Memorial CAROL JONES President ANITA SLOMINSKI Vice-President HENRIETTA BAULDAUF Secretary DOROTHY CORN Treasurer 135 Sycam le MaU EILEEN JONES President BETTY LOU GRIMSLEY Vice-President BARBARA COTTON Secretary JANET WOLF Treasurer Situated on the east side of the four-dormitory quadrangle is Sycamore Hall, home of a majority of the dormitories ' freshman girls. Equipped with almost every essential for convenience, Sycamore Hall also sponsors dances, teas, and pajama parties as well as many other social events during the year. One of the particular prides of the girls of Sycamore is the hair washing and drying department of the Hall. The Hall also provides kitchenettes where snacks can be prepared, game rooms with ping-pong tables, card tables, and shuffleboard, and music rooms with pianos and radio-phonographs. Probably the most relaxing part of the dormitory is the restful lounges of which the girls really make use. Leading activity girl in Sycamore is Mary Msnn, who besides being a member of Mortar Board is vice-president of the A.W.S. Council, vice-president of the Education Club, president of Alpha Lambda Delta, a member of Pleiades, Pi Lambda Theta, Girls ' Drum and Bugle Corps, and Y.W.C.A. Edwina Myers also rates a top position on the activity scroll as a member of the Y.W.C.A. Cabinet, Board of Stand- ards, A.W.S. Council, and Le Cercle Francois and as a Coed Counselor. Prexy Eileen Jones sets a good example for other girls by being a Coed Counselor and a member of I.S.A. Jeanette Pass is a member of Sigma Alpha lota and Oceanides. 136 (Upper left) : Riddle, Sexson, Pesch. (Upper right) i Seated: Heckenhower, Kreighbaum, Weisner, Hyatt, Flrebaugh, Homan, Wood, Mathews. Standing: Kramer, Kingsolver. (Middle left): Swift, Cassady, Grusin, Cohn. (Lower left) : Green, Myers, Ruff, Ruff. (Lower right): Basing, Taylor, Wright, Goshorn. 137 A SHORT STORY © This is the short, tragic tale of Abernathy D. Plegum of Elletts- ville, who unfortunately was caught driving his pa ' s horse and wagon down East Fifth Street on the first day of Rush Week. The Sig Nus spied him, and ambushing anemic Abernathy, they rushed him to their luxurious upstairs shower room and pledged him while the boys washed the mud off his boots. The Phi Gams got him next and promised they ' d groom him to become the Ellettsville Ex- press ; so he immediately took their button. It wasn ' t long, though, until antiquated Abernathy ambled across the street where he instantly was blackjacked and made an Acacian. Still dazed, the poor boy next found himself playing first trumpet in a Pi Lam jam band; so he could do nothing but accept another. The A.T.O. ' s sold him their gadget by teaching him to bank the eight ball on their basement pool table, but a Tri Delt cutie was too strong a magnet and drew ambiguous Abernathy to the K.D.R. house. Sitting down on their front steps, he scarcely had opened his lunch bucket when the D.U. and Phi Psi wolves, smelling his nearness, grabbed Ellettsville ' s proud son and deposited their lodge jewelry on his lapel. Becoming tired and weary, ailing Aber- nathy climbed on a big dog which carried him to the Lambda Chi house. However, two long-haired Kappa Sigs, observing the lad ' s classy overalls and straw hat, pledged him and then lost him on their country estate. The Delta Chis soon found him and tied him to a tree before they could slap on the gadget, but the Theta Chis did one better by throwing him into the Jordan, after which he accepted the badge because he figured he had needed a bath anyway. The S.A.E. ' s got him by saying they needed one more to fill their quota of a hundred and the Betas promised him the I.S.A. presidency if he would only say yes. The Phi Kappas pledged him without a struggle, and later when the Delts asked him at dinner if he wanted any more corn and the lackadaisical lad passed his glass, they knew they had the right man. The Sammies won ado- lescent Abernathy by donating an Intramural cup as a spittoon, but then the Sig Chis got him by promising him a battleship when all of them got in the Navy. As the now-aggravated Abernathy began looking for his pa ' s lost wagon, the Sig Pis nabbed him and assured him he ' d have his name spelled correctly in the Redbook ; so he took gadget number nineteen. Disgusted and droopy, he thought he had made the rounds until the Phi Delts came to town. One trip to their rural home and back was enough; so astounded Abernathy dashed uptown, pawned his pledge buttons, and made a down- payment on a room in North Hall. e 138 First Row QUENTIN ALCORN, Fr., Aurora DON ANDERSON, Soph., Indianapolis VACHEL ANDERSON, Fr., Indianapolis HARRY APPENZELLER, Soph., Redkey KEITH ATTEBERRY, Jr., Anderson MORRIS BECK, Fr., Bloomington DAVID BLACK, Sr., Bloomington JOE BONHAM, Fr., Hartford City EUGENE W. BROWN, Sr., Indianapolis Second Row DONALD CROOKE, Fr., Indiana REX CURFMAN, Fr., Marion RICHARD E. DERBY, Sr., Elkhart WILLIAM P. DETROY, Fr., Evan HAL DRIVER, Jr., Aurora FRED EAST, Fr., Bloomington J. C. FORSYTH, Sr., Terre Haute CLYDE FOX, Fr., Bloomington J. WARREN FOX, Jr., Vevay Third Row JAMES GADDIS, Soph., Fran ROBERT GEMMER, Fr., Indian. CARL GOEBEL, Jr., Ft. Wayne RUSSEL GOEBEL, Sr., Marion TOM HARBOUGH, Fr., Bloomi ORDINE HIENE, Jr., Ft. Wayr FLOYD HOUSE, Sr., Blooming BEN HOWARD, Fr., Valparai JAMES HOWARD, Fr., Valpar kfort 3polis Fourth Row PHIL JACKSON, Jr., Bloomington CHARLES W. JARRETT, Soph., Princeton ROY JONES, Soph., Pittsboro CALVIN KLINGELHOFFER, Jr., Aurora BOB McCRAKEN, Fr., Terre Haute DONALD McMURTRY, Jr., Frankfort JOHN MADDOX, Soph., Hartford City JAMES MAGENNIS, Fr., Indianapolis DON MANN, Fr., Michigan City ROBERT PRUETT, Fr., Indianapolis Fifth Row JOHN REDMAN, Jr., Oakland City MAURICE A. ROBINSON, Jr., Frankfort WILLIAM F. ROBINSON, Sr., Hammond ARTHUR EUGENE RODENBERGER, Sr., Frankfort MARK RUDOLPH, Fr., Indianapolis ED SCHINEBEIN, Soph., Indianapolis BOOTH SCHOLL, Sr., Speedway City JAMES SHAW, Fr., Gary BOB SHAWHAN, Fr., Hartford City BRANSON SMITH, Soph., Earl Park Sixth Row GLEN G. SMITH, Sr., Indianapolis JOHN C. SPRINGER, Sr., Indianapoli: JIM TEDFORD, Soph., Frankfort JACK TURNER, Sr., Crown Point GUY WELLMAN, Jr., Valparaiso WARD WILLIAMS, Fr., Colfax KEITH WILSON, Jr., Bloomington SWIFT WUNKER, Jr., Lawrenceburg GUS YOCHEM, Soph., Corydon FRANK ZELLER, Fr., Bloomington J-lh t :lft ' f % % % Ij J. V r B ll 140 A cacta Founded at University of Michigan, 1904 Founded at Indiana University, 1916 Twenty-five chapters It ' s just an old southern custom a few of the leisure-loving Acacians repeat as they relax in their recently built palatial Third Street man- sion, supposedly the best furnished fraternity on the campus. The Acacians are proud of these fur- nishings, especially a huge plaque containing their crest which is constructed of eight kinds of wood and hangs over the fireplace. Another part of the house of which the non-Greek-lettered Greeks are proud is their powder room for girls who attend their traditional Acacia Colonnade dance or Goat Dinner. Rating a top spot on the fraternity ' s activity list are Guy Wellman and Fred Huff, Jr., who uphold the Acacians ' fame on the baseball diamond and the gridiron, respectively. Hal Driver and Swift Wunker wave the fraternity ' s flag when basketball time rolls around, and then there are the talking points of the colonial lodge being carried forth by varsity debater William Robinson, a member of Tau Kappa Alpha. Sophomore Jim Gaddis, president of Skull and Crescent, sophomore foot- ball manager, and a member of the Student War Council and of the business staff of The 1942 Arbutus, is top man of the fraternity ' s second- year men. JACK FOX President JAMES GADDIS Vice-President GUS YOCHEM Secretary LAWRENCE WELCH Treasurer llpJta Gfit 0 ne fa JOHN S. SCOTT President PARKER GRAVES Vice-President WILFRED WILKINS Secretary LAWRENCE YEAGER Treasurer The important problem of the A.T.O. ' s this year has been to find something for Howdy Wilcox to do in his spare time. Howdy, who can be located at any time at the office of the University News Bureau, The Daily Student office, Tri Delt house, Louisville, or Dr. E. M. Linton ' s government classes, was the man who promoted the publicity cam- paign of Phyllis Wilcox, the Alphi Chi songbird, who went to the finals of the Hour of Charm contest. The queer part of that promotion job, ac- cording to Howdy, was the fact that both Phyllis and he had the same last names, were both from Indianapolis, yet were not related. Another of the fraternity ' s top spot activity men is Don Davis, a member of Sphinx Club, Board of Aeons, Dragons Head, and president of Delta Sigma Pi. Nor are the A.T.O. ' s left out of basket- ball, football, and swimming activities. Taking care of the interests of the Greek lodge in these direc- tions are Roy Kilby, Charles Steele, Bob Ricketts, and Fred Peak. Freshman Bert Turner leads the pledge group as president of the Interfraternity Pledge Council and Lewis Ferguson keeps the flag flying in Delta Sigma Pi, Skull and Crescent, and as a basketball manager. Founded at Virginia Military Institute, 1865 Founded at Indiana University, 1915 Ninety-three chapters 142 J V f  « (f  J rf J £ ££££££ O f fSJT:, ft. O f First Row CURT G. BEGERT, Fr., Evansville CRAIG BOOHER, Sr., Sullivan ROBERT N. CHATTIN, Sr., Union City CARL CHEADLE, Jr., Gary JAMES R. CLARK, Fr., Winchester WILLIAM COON, Sr., Greenfield JAMES W. CROOKS, Soph., Indianapoli WILLIAM CROXTON, Fr., Terre Haute DON DAVIS, Sr., Culver Second Row JOSEPH P. DAVIS, Sr., Indianapolis ROBERT McAFEE DAVIS, Soph., W. Lafayette JOE F. DEWBERRY, Jr., Kokomo C. LEWIS FERGUSON, Soph., Indianapolis WARREN E. FOREMAN, Jr., Culver ROBERT A. GASTON, Jr., Indianapolis DONALD D. GOURLEY, Fr., Gary PARKER GRAVES, Jr., Robinson, III. JOHN S. HARMAN, Fr., Pine Village Third Row WILLIAM HENDRICKSON, Jr., Indianapoli GLENN W. IRWIN, Sr., Roachdale WILLIAM F. JESTER, Fr., Indianapolis MAXWELL WAYNE KAMM, Jr., Clinton ROY KILBY, Soph., Muncie BURTON W. LAMBERT, Fr., Kokomo J. WAYNE LINDQUIST, Fr., Gary FRED LOGAN, Jr., Bourbon RALPH E. MCDONALD, Jr., Indianapolis Fourth Row FRANK E. MALIFF, Fr., Winchester RALPH W. MEYER, Sr., Ft. Wayne THEODORE MEYER, Jr., Framingham, Mas GEORGE W. MOHR, Jr., Kokomo RICHARD E. NEUMAN, Jr., Richmond BOB PADDOCK, Fr., Indianapolis FREDERICK PEAK, Fr., Indianapolis JEROME H. PETERS, Sr., Marysville PAUL ROBERT PRESSLER, Soph., Ft. Wayne Fifth Row KEITH C. REESE, Sr., Indianapolis BOB RIDGELY, Fr., Gary ROBERT MURRAY RICKETTS, Jr., Kokomo ROBERT G. ROBB, Sr., Indianapolis JOHN S. SCOTT, Jr., Richmond W. COURTNEY SEAGLE, Fr., Indianapolis ROBERT F. SMITH, Soph., Gary CHARLES STEELE, Sr., Chicago, III. ROBERT TAYLOR, Sr., Sullivan Sixth Row RICHARD HUGH TERWILLIGER, Soph., Richm HERBERT W. TURNER, Fr., Indianapolis KERMIT WAHL, Soph., Columbia, S.D. HOWARD S. WILCOX, Sr., Indianapolis JAMES FRANKLIN WILEY, Soph., lndianac W. G. WILKINS, Soph., Gary ROBERT L. WITHAM, Sr., Indianapolis FRED R. WOLF, Jr., Indianapolis WALLY YAKEY, Fr., Indianapolis LAWRENCE B. YEAGER, Soph., Indianapo 143 • v Iff ' Founded at Miami University, 1839 Founded at Indiana University, 1845 Eighty-nine chapt ers Seta Iheta Pi First Row WILLARD ALBRIGHT, Soph., Bedford JOHN ALLMAN, Soph., Muncie SEAVEY BAILEY, Fr., Toledo, Ohio DALE BELLES, Soph., Gary ALLEN BROWN, Jr., New York, N.Y. MONT CARPENTER, Jr., Columbus BILL CHATTIN, Soph., Union City BILL COMPTON, Soph., Indianapolis WILLIAM COOK, Jr., Bloomington JOE CRAVENS, Fr., Toledo, Ohio Second Row LEONARD EDWARDS, Fr., Columbus NORMAN EGGERS, Sr., Whiting BILL ESAREY, Fr., Bloomington JESSE ESCHSACH, Jr., Warsaw DAVID GAUNT, Fr., Anderson THOMAS GREEN, Soph., Indianapolis PRESTON GREGORY, Jr., Bloomington FRANCIS HANLEY, Fr., Muncie JAMES HENLEY, Sr., Carthage WINFIELD JONES, Soph., Bicknell Third Row KURT KREYLING, Sr., Evansville CHARLES LEGEMAN, Sr., Indianapolis ANSON McADAMS, Jr., Boswell HUGH BEST McADAMS, Sr., Boswell BOB McADAMS, Fr., Boswell DON McCLELLAND, Soph., Lafayette LESLIE MAXWELL, Soph., Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. RICHARD O. MORRIS, Sr., Lebanon JOHN MOYNAHAN, Jr., Indianapolis BOB NUFFER, Fr., Toledo, Ohio Fourth Row DICK O ' BRYAN, Soph., Columbus EUGENE OLSON, Fr., Gary CHARLES E. OSWALD, Soph., Evans PAUL PFENNINGER, Fr., New Castle JAMES PIPER, Jr., Montclair, N.J. ROBERT RABER, Jr., Indianapolis GEORGE REED, Soph., Bloomington BEN RICHASON, Fr., Logansport ALVIN ROCKHILL, Fr., Warsaw MAX ROSE, Jr., Bluffton Fiftli Row HUBERT SCHEIDLER, Jr., Muncie CHARLES W. SEMBOWER, Sr., Bloomington JOE SIBBETT, Soph., Frankfort CARLETON SMITH, Jr., Toledo, Ohio DICK STARR, Fr., Bloomington LYLE TAYLOR, Jr., Hamilton RICHARD THORNTON, Soph., Indianapolis ROBERT TURGI, Jr., New Castle CLIFF WIETHOFF, Sr., Seymour MARK WOODWARD, Soph., Gary 144 A boy smiles; the coeds sigh. Yes, he must be a member of Beta Theta Pi; for the Betas are rec- ognized as the leading swappers of campus jewelry. One of the sentimental traditions of the fraternity on this campus is that of members put- ting out their pins in the Wellhouse. After each serenade, too, the members meet in the Wellhouse and go through the fraternity ritual. It cannot be said that the Tenth Street fraternity is losing out in honors bestowed on the chosen few for athletic excellence. Varsity track stars, Hugh McAdams and Roy Cochran, keep the colors flying for their brothers while they strive also to bring honors to their Alma Mater. The Betas are high on the scholastic ladder, too, with James Woodbridge Henley copping honors in that direc- tion by making Phi Beta Kappa. How he can at- tain these honors and still live with Rocky Mc- Clelland, however, is somewhat of a problem. Rocky is the chief annoyance, the brothers pro- claim, the reason being that he learned to play Rachmaninoff ' s masterpieces at the age of nine, and now is trying to reclaim his piano talents at the age of nineteen. CARLETON SMITH President WILLARD ALBRIGHT Vice-President RICHARD THORNTON Secretary ALLEN BROWN Treasurer m 1 b l t Jbj«Wb ihbjM 1 I I m. I fa i fa fa fa i fa fa C CS m k 145 Q P : CI o fS D C ff 15 - SAM HOSTETTER President HOWARD KNIGHT Vice-President STANLEY PATTON Secretary WARREN ETCHESON Treasurer Don ' t be conventional — it ' s boring, is the motto of Delta Chi, the fraternity transformed from a law organization into a social group back in 1923. Called the Wingate Lodge, the house was one of the first erected on the Quadrangle and is popularly known as the fraternity where anything can happen, and usually does. Particular achievements of Delta Chi include everything from supplying the University with in- numerable athletes to staging the best social dances on the campus. Along the line of athletes, the Delta Chis claim next year ' s football captain, Bob White, who had the best average gain in yardage of any of Coach A. N. Bo McMillin ' s backfield football players this year, and Jim Tiny Trimble, one of Bo ' s sixty-minute line- men on the Crimson squad. Fred Wilt, one of the leading two-milers in the nation, is a Delta Chi who has greatly bolstered Coach Billy Hayes ' Indiana University track team. On the scholastic side of the picture are Proctor Spencer Myers, who thinks nothing of making fif- teen hours of A, and Wilfred Lusher, a member of Phi Eta Sigma, telegraph editor of The Daily Student, and an associate editor of The Arbu- tus. 146 jbelta Glti First Row MILTON ARCHER, Sr., Terre Haute JOHN J. BALDWIN, Sr., Crown Point ROBERT C. BARTLETT, Soph., Bloomington LEON BELL, Fr., Brazil JOHN JAMES CALI, PG, Bloomington WILLIAM CRONIN, Jr., Bridgeport, Conn. GORDON DILLS, Fr., Garrett WILLIAM KENNETH DOLEN, Fr., Edinburg Second Row RALPH DUCKWALL, Soph., Elkhart TINKER ETCHESON, Sr., Bainbridge JACK FARRIS, Sr., Washington CHARLES FINNEY, Jr., Martinsville NORMAN GREEN, Fr., Bedford RICHARD F. HAINES, Soph., Goshen DONALD R. HASTY, Soph., Vincennes ROBERT E. HORN, Fr., Indiana Harbc Third Row D. SAMUEL HOSTETTER, Sr., Bainbridge ALBERT JONES, Fr., Columbus HOWARD KNIGHT, Soph., La Crosse HARRY LENARD, Fr., La Porte WALTER F. LEWANDOWSKI, Soph., Gary BILL LOWE, Fr., Columbus WILFRED LUSHER, Jr., Columbus DICK MERLEY, Soph., South Bend Fourth Row VERGIL F. MILLER, Sr., Bloomington JOHN MURRAY, Soph., Bloomington STANLEY PATTON, Soph., Hardinsburg J. ROBERT PENCE, Jr., Harvard, III. BILL PLATT, Jr., Aurora PHILIP RARIDEN, Fr., Bedford ROBERT D. ROSENBUSH, Soph., Kokom ROBERT ROY, Fr., Elkhart JACK SALISBURY, Soph., Elkhart Fifth Row RICHARD D. SNOBARGER, Soph., Goshe ROLLIE TINDAL, Fr., Bedford JIM TRIMBLE, Sr., McKeesport, Pa. WILLIAM VAN FLEIT, Soph., Garrett DAVID WARNUGUT, Fr., Plymouth BOB WHITE, Jr., Joliet, III. FREDERICK WILT, Jr., Pendleton BUCK WOOLDRIDGE, Jr., Kokomo DARELL E. ZINK, Sr., Bloomington Founded at Cornell University, 1890 Founded at Indiana University, 1925 Thirty-four chapters 147 First Row WENDELL R. ALDRICH, Sr., Angola JACK ALEXANDER, Fr., Lebanon JACK ALLEN, Fr., Wabash JOHN ANDERSON, Fr., Lafayette ROBERT WALTER ARNOLD, Sr., Michigan City ROBERT L. BODEN, Jr., Jefferson Town, Ky. ALBERT THOMAS BOOST, Jr., Moline, III. GEORGE O. BROWNE, Jr., Fr., Indianapolis MARION J. CALBECK, Sr., Ligonier MILTON CAUDILL, Soph., Morehead, Ky. JOHN CHAPPELL, PG, Petersburg Second Row JAMES COMPTON, Soph., Frankfort ROBERT F. CURL, Sr., South Bend HARRY N. EADS, Fr., Dayton, Ohio RICHARD H. ENGLEHART, Fr., Brazil GEORGE FOLEY, Soph, Gary WILLIAM SITES FRASER, Fr., Delphi JOHN GALLINATTI, Soph., Gary THOMAS GILLFILLAN, Fr., Glencoe, III. JOHN GLOVER, Fr., Huntington, W.Va. JOHN R. HATFIELD, Jr., Indianapolis ROBERT H. HENDERSON, Jr., Terre Haute Third Row HARRY E. HUFF, Sr., Grand Rapids, Mil ROBERT HUNTER, Fr., Terre Haute THOMAS HUTCHISON, Fr., Indianapolis JOSEPH L. HUTTON, Sr., Hammond ERNEST K. JAMES, Jr., Crawfordsville STEPHEN JARVIS, Fr., Hammond ROBERT S. JOHNSON, Sr., Indianapolis ROBERT LUCAS, Jr., Gary BILL McCULLOUGH, Fr., Indianapolis JIM McDANIELS, Fr., Lebanon JOHN MAYCOX, Sr., Cincinnati, Ohio Fourth Row FERNANDO L. MENDEZ, Sr., South JOHN P. MOON, Jr., Crawfordsvil JACK MORRIS, Soph., Akron ALEXANDER F. MUIR, Sr., Ellettsvil WILLIAM PEIRCE Jr., Fr., Crawford: ROBERT G. PHILLIPS, Sr., Gary BILL PIERCE, Sr., Indianapolis EDWARD M. RAGSDALE, Fr., India DICK RETTERER, Fr., Indianapolis PATSY RONZONE, Jr., Elkhart Fifth Row JOHN M. RUPERT, Fr., Dayton, Ohio LEE R. RUST, Fr., Holland BEN M. SHERA, Jr., Lebanon JOHN THOMAS SMITH, Jr., Delphi ROBERT SMITH, Jr., Indianapolis JOHN SNYDER, Fr., Gary JAMES L. STILES, Fr., Shoals JOSEPH B. VURPILLAT, Jr., Jr., Peru GILBERT M. WILHELMUS, Sr., Newburgh ROBERT A. WOOLFORD, Soph., Terre Haute 148 jbeua au jbetta Founded at Bethany College, 1 858 Founded at Indiana University, 1870 Seventy-five chapters Situated snugly on the corner of Eighth Street and Indiana Avenue is the Delta Shelter, com- monly referred to as the Calumet Area annex since approximately one-fourth of the boys of D.T.D. hail from that smoke-filled haven of steel mills, soap factories, and politicians. One of the fraternity ' s greatest assets is the nightly oratorical boresses led by Ben Farmboy Shera, the pride and best-dresser of Boone County, and G. Ker- foot Englehart, who spent most of the first semes- ter worrying about how to write up Indiana ' s moral football victories for The Daily Student. Perched atop the activity pole at the Shelter is Sandy Muir, only male on the campus to be limited this year by the Board of Standards for too many activities. He was the first semester editor-in-chief of The Daily Student, first semes- ter president of the Board of Aeons, president of Sigma Delta Chi, and managing editor of The Arbutus. Robert Lucas is a member of Union Board and a junior baseball manager. The Delts won the intramural swimming crown this year for the fifth consecutive time. In addition they hope to see Baseball Captain Don Dunker pitching in the Big Leagues in the next few years. FERNANDO L. MENDEZ President ALEXANDER F. MUIR Vice-President JACK MORRIS Secretary JOHN MOON Treasurer 149 2 eua 1 pdi oH MICKEY MILLER President WALTER LERNER Vice-President HARRY HALSALL Secretary WILLIAM WRIGHT Treasurer Led by that impeccable hare, Peter Rabbit Miller, members of Delta Upsilon fraternity, who burrow on the corner of East Third Street and Ballantine Road, are anything but a bunch of sad bunnies. Noted for their annual Rose Ball formal dance and early morning serenades of residences within seven blocks, the D.U. ' s are paced in ath- letics by Irv Swanson and Jim Funk in basketball, Howdy Elliott in football, and Tom Judge in track. Jim Brown heads the D.U. baseball battery. Fancy Dans include Paul SplittorfF and Irv Swan- son, members of Sphinx Club, and Walt Lerner, associate editor of The Arbutus and a member of the Interfraternity Council. Among the Hercu- lean physical specimens in the Delta Upsilon col- lection are Bill Strangler Hall, John Skull Whitfield, and Bob Ellison. The boys still are talking about winning the Homecoming decoration contest last fall even though Uncle Sam has drawn freely from their ranks with Jack Gibson, Andy Sambor and Rocky Ford now in the Air Corps, and Bob Strawbridge and Bob Walda in the Army. Promi- nent alumni on the campus are E. Ross Bartley and Dean Arthur B. Leible. Founded at Williams College, 1 834 Founded at Indiana University, 1915 Sixty-one chapters ■' ; ' : s: 150 ft c ft m w 1 L Jf, L T V«rT fj ft ft ft ftiBI ft ft A l F 1 fgtk kk ft £ ft ft Jr j Ti .ft ft C ft ft ft Ri pi ft ft ft p to. ilii First Row FRANK ARMSTRONG, Fr., Geneva EDWIN ASHLEY, Fr., Shelbyville JOHN ATZ, Fr., Goshen CHARLES BEAL, Soph., La Porle LIONEL BILLMAN, Fr., Logonsport JIM BROWN, Soph., Bloomington JOHN GEORGE BYERS, Sr., Hammonc WARREN CARMONY, Soph., Manilla JOHN CRAWLEY, Soph., Elkhart ROBERT CURREY, Fr., Mishawaka Second Row ROBERT CUSACK, Jr., Indianapolis DICK DILLEY, Soph., Elkhart DICK DOWDEN, Soph., Bloomfield HOWARD ELLIOTT, Jr., Elkhart ROBERT M. ELLISON, Jr., Winona ! JOHN ERDMANN, Jr., Elkhart ART FARQUHARSON, Jr., Gary LOUIS FUNK, Fr., Kentland NEIL E. FUNK, Soph., La Porte PAUL GRECIAN, Fr., Flat Rock Third Row BILL HALL, Soph., Washington, D.C. BYRNE HALLETT, Jr., Indianapolis HARRY HALSALL, Soph., Gary BOB HAYES, Fr., Shelbyville BOB HAUGH, Jr., East Chicago JACK HENDERSON, Jr., Gary KENNY HOLLETT, Fr., Indianapolis BILL HOLTEL, Soph., Shelbyville TOM JUDGE, Soph., Mansfield, Pa. WALTER G. KRUMWIEDE, Sr., Elkhart Fourth Row WALT LERNER, Jr., Elkhart FRANK LEWIS, Soph., Indianapolis JIM McCONNELL, Jr., Evonsville FREDRICK L. McLAUGHLIN, Soph., Elkhart ARTHUR MAY, Soph., South Bend BILL MELOY, Fr., Shelbyville MICKEY MILLER, Sr., Morgantown WILLIAM MORRIS, Sr., Anderson GEORGE MURPHY, Soph., Franklin ROGER NEIGHBORGALL, Fr., Garrett Fifth Row JIM OSTROWSKI, Fr., East Chicago BOB PRISER, Fr., Goshen ANDREW H. SAMBOR, Jr., Jr., Munster JOHN SEIMETZ, Fr., La Porte ROBERT SHORT, Soph., Springville BRAD SLOCUM, Soph., East Orange, N.J. JIM SMITH, Soph., Shelbyville PAUL W. SPLITTORFF, Sr., Evonsville ROBERT S TRAWBRIDGE, Sr., Ft. Wayne IRV SWANSON, Jr., La Porte Sixth Row WILLIAM SWINFORD, Jr., Indiana HARRY TRASTER, Sr., Milford ROBERT E. WALDA, Sr., Ft. Wayne IRL WARD, Fr., Rushville HENRY H. WELLS, Fr., Scottsburg JOHN S. WHITFIELD, Jr., Sr., Indii JOHN WILSON, Fr., Evonsville NED WOHLFORD, Jr., Goshen WILLIAM WRIGHT, Sr., Elkhart 151 Founded at Middlebury College, 1905 Founded at Indiana University, 1926 Twenty chapters Kap ta 2 eud R ta First Row DAN BANNISTER, Jr., Avon, N.Y. DON BECK, Fr., Gary JIM BOND, Fr., Gary H. LOUIS CONN, Sr., Danville JACK DAVIS, Soph., Frankfort JAMES DOYLE, Soph., Hebron HORACE EARLEY, Fr., Brazil JON EVANS, Soph., Gary Second Row BILL FERGUSON, Fr., Frankfort G. ROBERT FORD, Jr., Alexandria DEAN FOSTER, Sr., Bellflower, III. CHARLES FROHMAN, Sr., Columbus RALPH HANNIE, Fr., Monroe ROBERT HARRIS, Soph., Hammond J. WILLIAM HOHE, Jr., Huntington TED HOOKER, Fr., Frankfort Third Row DUANE JOYCE, Soph., Acfon PETER KECKICH, Fr„ Whiting JOHN KOKOS, Fr., Gary ROBERT LaCROIX, Jr., Seymour LYNN LONGNECKER, Fr., Kendallville DENNIS NICHOLAS, Sr., Rockville CHARLES O ' BRIEN, Sr., Danville JOHN O ' BRIEN, Soph., Danville Fourth Row MICHAEL PAKUCKO, Sr., Chicago, III. CHARLES PEARCE, Fr., Jeffersonville FRED G. PFROMMER, Sr., Hammond WILLIAM J. SIFF1N, Soph., Frankfort JOHN SPENCER, PG, Franklin EDWARD J. SWETS, Sr., Hammond THOMAS TERPINAS, Soph., Frankfort GEORGE ZUR SCHMIEDE, Fr., New Alban 152 Kappa Delta Rho has a location that might be called quote one of the better, unquote. For these fortunate lads recently built a new house exactly eighteen feet, four inches from the Tri Delt house, on a clear day. Situated on the third floor of the K.D.R. house, behind locked doors, is the fraternity ' s lone mem- ber of Phi Beta Kappa, Hadley Conn. Looked up to by all the pledges is the tallest man in the house, Dan Bannister — height six feet, four inches. Sphinx Club man and member of Blue Key, he is a leading student in the School of Business. Chief boresser and funny man at the fraternity is Bob Ford, who is ably assisted by the future hope of the K.D.R. ' s, Bill Siffin. Prexy Dean Foster, psychology major and singer of the latest hit tunes, can be persuaded that he is the smoothest boy in the house, because the brothers say that he has the prettiest hair, teeth, eyes and coed in the lot. An annual venison dinner commemorates the anniversary of the founding of the fraternity. Tradition also dictates an annual Mothers ' Day banquet and a Thanksgiving dinner for alumni members of the faculty. DEAN FOSTER President DAN BANNISTER Vice-President JAMES DOYLE Secretary CHARLES O ' BRIEN Treasurer ft HCj 153 ' ,a iir.K £ q p £ . c ci ' Cs « « P f: O GARZA BALDWIN President RICHARD LEWIS Secretary MAX BURGMAN Treasurer Situated between the campus and Nashville, Brown County, is the towering mansion of Kappa Sigma, with the odd title of the Menagerie. It seems the Kappa Sigs have acquired not only one but two oversized Great Dane puppies. The reason for the unusual purchase was somewhat vague; but since the outbreak of the war, the situation has been cleared up considerably. Sensing the ban on automobiles, some of the boys decided it would be a brilliant idea to purchase the dogs, feed them, then hitch them to a buggy so that they would not have to walk when they had a date. Other reasons given for the purchase of these ponderous canines reveal that the puppies have been a great aid in rescuing the brothers who have lost their way going home from daily classes. Not to be forgotten are the mighty men who make up the fraternity. Among the leaders are Lover Jim Morrison, who supposedly holds all campus records for having put out his pin the most times, the last count being seventeen. Other prom- inent men of Kappa Sigma include Garza Baldwin and Kay Hilkert, Sphinx Club members, and Stewart Cohn, already famous for his musical scores. 154 Kanpxi §i(fma First Row RICHARD ARONHALT, Fr., Richmond DICK BAILEY, Fr., Logonsporl GARZA BALDWIN, Jr., Sr., Vincennes PAUL BERRY, Soph., Grand Rapids, Mich. MAX BURGMAN, Jr., Logansport JOHN BYERS, Jr., West Lebanon JOE CAMERON, Fr., East Gary EDWARD CARLSON, Sr., Peru SAM COLE, Fr., Peru JACK CONE, Fr., Chicago, III. Second Row JOHN CORBIN, Jr., Sandborn JAMES R. CRODIAN, Soph., Peru PAUL DICKMAN, Fr., Shelbyville JAMES A. DURHAM, Sr., Berea, Ky. GENE FIGEL, Fr., Indianapolis RICHARD FOLTZ, Fr., Bremen LEE FORD, Soph., Indianapolis WILLIAM M. FORREST, Fr., Elkhart JAMES P. GALLIVAN, Fr., New Castl. WILLIAM H. GOOD, Jr., Hammond Third Row ROBERT GRADLE, Soph., Hobart JACK GRAVES, Jr., West Lafayette JACK G. HANSEN, Soph., La Porte WILLIAM R. HARRISON, Jr., Indianapolis THOMAS C. HASBROOK, Sr., Indianapoli KARL HEINZELMAN, Soph., Warsaw C. KAY HILKERT, Jr., Logansport KENNETH HULL, Soph., Indianapolis DANNY JENKINS, Jr., Gary JOSEPH K. JENKINS, Jr., Richmond Fourth Row SAMUEL KEESEY, Jr., South Bend JAMES KIESLING, Soph., Logansport LOUIS A. KIESLING, Soph., Logansport WILLIAM LEMAN Jr., Soph., Bremen RICHARD LEWIS, Sr., Bloomington CECIL LOCKWOOD, Jr., Sr., Bluffton JACK McCRAY, Sr., Bluffton R. JOHN McELWEE, Fr., Indianapolis DAVID A. MACKLIN, Sr., Decatur GENE MEIHSNER, Soph., Indianapolis Fifth Row FIELDING MORRISON, Fr., JefTersonville JAMES MORRISON, Jr., East Grand Rapids, N BOB RANKIN, Jr., Logansport ROBERT RASOR, Soph., Warsaw JARVIS ROPER, Fr., Hobart WILLARD C. STEELE, Fr., Logansport JAMES M. STEVENS, Jr., Noblesville WILLIAM JAMES STOGDILL, Jr., Bluffton PAT TRIXLER, Fr., Huntington JAMES WHISMAN, Fr., Shelbyville GENE WILLIAMS, Soph., Indianapolis Founded at University of Virginia, 1 869 Founded at Indiana University, 1887 One hundred and twelve chapters 155 First Row ROBERT L. ANDERSON, Soph., Seymour CLYDE E. BLOCKER, PG, Huntington HAROLD BONECUTTER, Jr., Marion, Ohio ROBERTS F. BROCK, Fr., New Albany FRANK W. BUSSARD, PG, South Bend CHARLES R. CLUNIE, Jr., Corydon VINCENT L. COSITORE, Soph., West New York, N BOB DOMBROSKI, Soph., West New York, N Second Row JUNIOR ENDICOTT, Fr., Flat Rock FREDERICK GORDON, Sr., Rochester RICHARD W. HELD, Sr., La Porte WALTER J. HEJNA, Jr., North Bergen EDWARD C. HERBERT, Sr., Gary JOHN A. HOLDCRAFT, Jr., Muncie KARL JOHNSON, Soph., North Verne MAURICE KIVETT, Jr., Greencastle Third Row WILBUR LEGG, Fr., Windfall DONALD LONG, Soph., Bloomington GEORGE LONG, PG, Ladoga JOHN B. LYON, Sr., Williston, N.D. CLARK McCLURE, Fr., Bloomington EARL MITCHELL, Soph., Anderson FRANK NIELSON, Jr., Freeport, L.I., N.Y. BOB RAUSCH, Fr., Terre Haute BOB SCHALLER, Jr., Attica Fourth Row CHARLES SHUMAKER, Sr., Dunkirk DAVID J. SLATTERY, Jr., Ft. Wayne CHARLES S. SMITH, Sr., Cumberland JIM SMITH, Jr., Rochester RICHARD B. SPENCER, Fr., Gary JOHN VIE, Soph., Indianapolis GEORGE J. WALTER, Jr., New Albany DONALD D. WHITE, Soph., Indianapoli RICHARD YARLIN G, Jr., Shelbyville J Jin (p i •% f% liMi 156 Jlcunbda Glii AUjlUgl Founded at Boston University, 1909 Founded at Indiana University, 1915 One hundred and seven chapters High on a windy hill is the ivy-covered home of the Lambda Chis, the fraternity that probably hears a greater variety of music than any other campus social organization. In the morning the shower room melodies of the next-door D.U. ' s echo through the Lambda Chi halls. During the day tuneful trills of neophyte musicians in the School of Music across the street float in the front door and windows. And at night musical strains of a local dance band can be heard from a res- taurant just east of the fraternity. It is rumored that the Lambda Chis have written a new song themselves e ntitled It Would Be So Peaceful in the Country. A tradition of the house is Pard, St. Bernard mascot, who is the oldest member of the frater- nity with the possible exception of Eddie Herbert, who is practically an institution. Party-boy Mau- rice Kivett, the house Romeo, heads the list of so- cial luminaries. Potential generals of the fraternity are Captain Fred Gordon and Private George Tubby Wal- ter, both of whom enlisted in the R.O.T.C. early this year. John Holdcraft, associate business man- ager of The Arbutus, and Charles Smith, a rod in the School of Business, are prominent activity men. WALTER HEJNA President JOHN VIE Vice-President KARL JOHNSON Secretary MAURICE KIVETT Treasurer 157 Plti 2 eua Iteia $ k GEORGE GRAESSLE President ROBERT MOORHEAD Secretary WILLIAM KERRIGAN Treasurer There is no doubt that the student body should bow down in humble acknowledgment to those laborious pledges of Phi Delta Theta, the forgot- ten freshmen who spent ten weeks of the first semester mowing the vast acres of windswept grass that make up the front lawn of the ninety- four-year-old fraternity, then retreated to the Phi Delt dormitory to get back into physical condition to mow the same spacious meadow again in the spring. The situation has become so irritating that the freshmen have seriously considered turning the lot into either an induction center, airplane base, or corn field to help their Uncle Sam sound taps for the Japs, instead of leaving it as a parking lot for football fans. Prominent among the up on the hill gang is Jack Wright, writer for The Daily Student and the man with the flash bulb camera, who has made many campus acquaintances by taking pic- tures of local beauties. Campbell Kane stands on the top rung of the athletic ladder, having gained nation-wide fame running for Coach Billy Hayes ' Crimson Harriers, while Chuck Jacoby has kept up the pigskin prestige of the only Alpha chapter of campus social organizations. Founded at Miami University, 1848 Founded at Indiana University, 1 849 One hundred and ten chapters 158 First Row WARREN ARDAPPLE, Jr., West Lafa RICHARD BLACKWELL, Jr., Franklin HAL BRIDGE, Sr., Tipton JAMES BRIGGS, Sr., Geneva MERRILL BROCKWAY, Fr., New Carl BOB BRODHECKER, Fr., Brownstown CHILTON BROWN, Soph., Bloomingh HOWARD BROWN, Soph., Dayton, C BOB BRUNER, Soph., Indianapolis WALTER BUCK, Jr., East St. Louis, II Second Row DEAN CALL, Sr., Gaston COURTLAND CARPENTER, Fr., New Castle WILLIAM CAVIN, Fr., Louisville, Ky. CLYDE C. CHRISTIANSEN, Sr., Miami, Fla. CHARLES CLIFFORD, Soph., Valparaiso TOM COSGROVE, Sr., Hammond DAN CRAVENS, Jr., Franklin ROBERT CUTLER, Jr., La Porte HAROLD DICKS, Fr., Lafayette ROBERT D. ELLISON, Sr., Shelbyville Third Row BOB ERDMANN, Jr., Columbia City JAMES FOLAND, Sr., Anderson AL FRANZ, Fr„ Tell City BILL FREY, Jr., Kokomo GEORGE GRAESSLE, Jr., Seymour TOMS GRAESSLE, Fr., Seymour JACK GREENO, Fr., Eggertsville, N.Y. BILL HOADLEY, Fr., Bloomington JOE HUGHES, Jr., Ellensburg, Wash. CHARLES JACOBY, Soph., Chicago, III. Fourth Row Fifth Row CAMPBELL KANE, Sr., Valparaiso JACK MEIHAUS, Soph., Indiar apolis GEORGE KENNELLY, Soph., Indianapolis JAMES MENSCH, Fr., Ft. Way ie WILLIAM KERRIGAN, Jr., Connersville WILLIAM D. MILES, Jr., Bloon i field BOB KIRK, Jr., Bloomington ROBERT G. MOORHEAD, Jr., 1 ndiana JAMES LAUPUS, Soph., Seymour WILLIAM D. MURCHIE, Jr., Bl Doming TED LEWIS, Sr., Beech Grove JOHN OVERSHINER, Jr., Colur nbus AL LOSCHE, Fr., Indianapolis JACK RAMSAY, Soph., Tipton BILL McCLAIN, Fr., Shelbyville JAMES ROGERS, Soph., Bloom ington BOB MclNTOSH, Soph., Tipton DICK ROWLAND, Soph., Bloo ■nington JOHN MASON, Fr., South Bend JOHN SNORTLE, Jr., Tipton GEORGE MEIHAUS, Sr., Indianapolis DICK SILVER, Jr., Knightstown Sixth Row CHARLES E. SMITH, Fr., Indianapolis CLAUDE SPILMAN, Sr., Rushville TOM TAUBENSEE, Jr., Kokomo ED TOMLINSON, Soph., Bloomington TOM VOSS, Fr., Seymour RICHARD WAGGONER, Sr., Rushville JOHN WELLS, Soph., Gary EDWARD G. WILLIAMS, Sr., Knightstown DICK W1NDLE, Fr., Valparaiso DAVE WOODBURN, Jr., Bloomington JACK WRIGHT, Sr., Rensselaer 159 Founded at Jefferson College, 1848 Founded at Indiana University, 1 871 Seventy-three chapters piu Qi atfuna 2 etia First Row ROBERT W. BARCLAY, Fr., Evansville ED BARTLEY, Sr., Bloomington KEITH BENDER, Soph., Bloomington ROBERT BERNHARDT, Jr., Evansville DEAN BIXLER, Soph., Gary JOHN W. BOEHNE, Sr., Evansville JOHN BOLLENBACHER, Soph., Bloomington ROBERT D. DONNELL, Fr., South Bend JOHN BONSIB, Fr., Ft. Wayne Second Row WILLIAM RICHARD DAVIS, Fr., Gary ROGER WILLIAMS EISINGER Jr., Sr., Washington, D.C. DAN L. ERHARDT, Soph., South Bend JOHN R. FEIGHNER, Sr., Marion RICHARD LEWIS FISHER, Soph., Greenwood FRANK GANS, Jr., Weston, W.Va. SHELDON GAYLE, Soph., Whiting GILMORE SMITH HAYNIE, Sr., Evansville EVERETT HOFFMAN, Sr., Evansville Third Row DICK W. HUNTER, Jr., Marion BOB JACKSON, Fr., Ft. Wayne ROBERT A. KECK Jr., Fr., Mt. Vernon STANLEY A. KLOPFENSTEIN, Jr., Portland THOMAS H. KRISE, Sr., Auburn SAM LAUDEMAN, Jr., Elwood ROBERT AYRES MacGILL, Soph., Indianapoli HOWARD McCLELLAND, Jr., Huntington HOOK MANGIN, Fr., Washington Fourth Row JAMES SHAN MARTIN, Fr., Ga EARL J. MASON, Fr., Marion ROY MEHLIG, Soph., Kokomo BOB MELLEN, Sr., Bedford RICHARD B. NEFF, Sr., Iowa Ci BOB NELSON, Jr., Marion GEORGE NICHOL, Fr., Evansvil ALAN NOLAN, Fr., Bloomingto JACK PECK, Fr., Indianapolis JACKSON B. PRESSLEY, Fr., Mc ty, Ic Fifth Row HARRY PRICE, Jr., Monticello ROBERT PURCELL, Soph., Bloomington TOM PURKY, Soph., Indianapolis WALTER REEVES, Fr„ Chicago, III. JOHN JAMES REINHARD, Jr., Sr., Washington, D. WILLIAM W. RIDGWAY, Jr., Evansville JAMES STORY, Fr., West Hempstead, N.Y. JERRY W. TORRANCE, Jr., Sr., Marion J. PETER WAKELAND, Soph., Chicago, III. DOUGLAS M. WEBER, Jr., Huntington 160 Awoooooooooo! This is not the hoot of an owl but merely the unconventional call of the mighty sophomores with the hats of black and white who have named themselves the Falcons. For it was from behind the Oolitic limestone walls of the Phi Gam house, the only fraternity on the campus, that this organization of organizations was thought of, planned, and introduced to the campus this year by the Fiji ' s two prominent sec- ond-year men, Keith Bender and All-American half-back Billy Hillenbrand. From its origin the Falcon Club spread like wild fire until now many sophomore men on the campus stand and look in awe at the lads with the two-toned hats. Besides being a charter member of the Falcon Club, Bill Hillenbrand has become famous throughout the nation as a leading performer on the gridiron. Other prize Fiji rodneys include Prexy Ed Bartley, a member of Sphinx Club, Union Board, and Board of Aeons, and Jack Feighner, also a member of Sphinx Club. The Phi Gams have won the Interfraternity scholarship race twice in the last three semesters. The sophomore class played an important part in raising the scholastic prestige, winning the Phi Eta Sigma trophy in 1941. EDWARD BARTLEY President JOHN WILLIAM BOEHNE III Secretary ROGER EISINGER Treasurer £l £•£}■ft c o ft rs ft Cj : O ft €j ff ft a O C ft ! ft ft o e 161 GEORGE AHLERING President JOHN McGREEVEY Vice-President TERRY COONAN Secretary LOUIS NOWLAN Treasurer Running a close race with the Kappa Sigs for the distinguished honor of having the house the greatest distance from the University is Phi Kappa, youngest fraternity on the campus. Although al- ready having relinquished eight of its members to Uncle Sam ' s Army and Navy, the fraternity has come a long wa y in its three years ' existence at Indiana. A happy occurrence during the school year for the neophyte members of the fraternity is Pledge Day, the time set aside when the freshmen take over the reins and make the upperclassmen do the unbearable tasks they are required to do throughout the year. The pledges also are given a chance to show their initiative on Shaving Day, set aside each year by the upperclassmen who let their beards grow for the occasion. An- other outstanding event in the Phi Kappa social calendar is the traditional Little Old Oaken Bucket football game played with members of the Purdue chapter. Prexy George Ahlering leads the activity pa- rade at the Phi Kappa House, being a member of Sphinx Club. Richard Houk has kept up the scho- lastic record of the house as a member of Phi Beta Kappa. 162 PJu Kap4%a First Row GEORGE H. AHLERING, Sr., Indianapolis MARTIN ANKENBRUCK, Jr., Ft. Wayne ROBERT BOSSETT, Fr., Spring Lake, N.J. BILL COONAN, Soph., Newburgh, N.Y. DON DALLIE, Jr., Michigan City ANTHONY DEL VECCHIO, Soph., Kokomo Second Row HAL DIEM, Jr., Fort Wayne GERARD HEINZ, Fr., Indianapolis DICK HOUK, PG, Logansport CARMEN IACINO, Soph., Farell, PETER IACINO, Soph., Farrell, Pa RALPH KOONTZ, Jr., Ft. Wayne Third Row JOHN McGREEVEY, Jr., Logansport BILL MILFORD, Fr., Marion LEWIS E. NOWLAN, Soph., Frankfo RYLAND ROESCH, Jr., Indianapolis JAMES RUNNION, Fr., Valparaiso DICK WALKOWIAK, Jr., East Chicac MAURICE A. WEIKART, Sr., Ft. Way Founded at Brown University, 1 889 Founded at Indiana University, 1937 Twenty-six chapters 163 First Row ROBERT DUGGER ANDERSON, Jr., ROBERT BAHNEY, Fr., Peru ALBERT L. BAILE Y, Sr., Anderson BILL BANNON, Jr., Kokomo COTTIE BERNDT, Fr., Bloomington ALLEN BUSKIRK, Fr., Bloomington R. BURTON CANADAY, Fr., Andersi JAMES J. CARTER, Jr., Indianapoli WALTER CHAMBERS, Soph., New C WILLIAM A. CHENOWETH, Fr., Ricr Second Row JOHN M. COGAN, Soph., Vincennes HERB CRAMER, Jr., South Bend ROBERT C. CULBERTSON, Jr., Vincenne J. KELLY DANT, Jr., Washington RICHARD MERRILL DAVIS, Sr., Marion KEN DeLANOY, Soph., Anderson ALAN DUNLAP, Soph., Bloomington KARL C. EBERLY, Jr., Fr., Ft. Wayne CHARLES A. FEEGER, Sr., Richmond WILLIAM FOX, Jr., South Bend Third Row CHARLES KIM GREENOUGH, Sr., Indiana ROBERT WILLIAM HARGER, Soph., Indianc ELLIOTT HICKAM, Sr., Spencer NAT U. HILL, Sr., Bloomington LEE HIRSCH, Fr., Trenton, N.J. BILL HUNGATE, Fr., Fountaintown LOUIS DOUGLAS KECK, Jr., Fr., Mt. Ver GEORGE L. KEMPF, Jr., Ft. Wayne WILLIAM L. KENNEDY, Soph, Van Wert, C. STEPHEN LEONARD, Sr., Hartford Cil Fourth Row ROBERT McCLURE, Sr., Kokomo LAWRENCE McFADDIN, Fr., Bloo JIM MACE, Soph., Sheridan RAY MARR, Jr., Columbus GLENN L. MARSHALL, Sr., Bloon PHILIP E. MENDENHALL, Jr., Ind DARL MILLER, Jr., Marion J. MARTIN MILLER, Soph., Indie JAMES E. NOLAND, Sr., Bloomi ARTHUR S. OVERBAY, Jr., Fr., In JOHN PEARMAN, Jr., Terre Hau ngton anapoli ' Fifth Row RALEIGH LEEWELL PHILLIPS, Jr., Fr., Brc ROY DANIEL POLLOM, Fr., Brazil ROBERT PRICE, Soph., Marion ROBERT REED, Jr., Columbus, Ohio CHARLES ROCKWOOD, Jr., Indianapoli JOHN ROSE, Fr., Terre Haute TRUMAN E. ROSE, Sr., Glen View, III. JACK ROWE, Fr., Glen Ellyn, III. WILLIAM RUDY, Fr., Indianapolis BILL SIMMERMON, Jr., Lapel JOHN E. SPRINGER, Sr., Kokomo Sixth Row JAMES THIEME, Soph., Ft. Wayne ROBERT LESLIE TINDALL, Fr., Greenfield CHARLES TOLBERT, Fr., Plymouth RICHARD J. WATERS, Fr., Logansport BEN WILSON, Sr., Bloomington JOHN WILSON, Fr., Bloomington WILLIAM F. WILSON, Fr., Indianapolis REX WISEHEART, Sr., Anderson RICHARD WORLEY, Soph., Indianapolis ROBERT ARTHUR YOUNG, Fr., Ft. Wayne JOHN H. 2ELLER, Sr., Brazil fi MhMMm A w 164 PlU K a41{X Pd4 Founded at Jefferson College, 1 852 Founded at Indiana University, 1869 Fifty-two chapters The police badged boys of Phi Kappa Psi, sensing the gravity of the national emergency, took drastic measures as soon as Uncle Sam said go get ' em on December 7, to prove that they were all-out, not all in. Ray Paddlefoot Marr was the first to aid in making the house self-suf- ficient by opening a barber chair on the third floor. Otto Ellis, the boogie woogie shyster, was so broken-hearted at the failure of his pet boress, the Race magazine, that he got married during Christmas vacation and zoomed off to the Army. Another innovation brought on by the present war was the nightly inventory during December of ac- tive members ' pins, except seniors, to see that no foolish brother trusted his precious gold-plated badge with a scheming coed. It has been sug- gested by Curly Bob Anderson, leading Phi Psi rodney, that all pins be melted down and sent to the Office of Production Management to help con- struct armaments. Prominent Phi Psis in campus activities include Charles Feeger, a member of Sphinx Club; Herb Cramer, a member of Scabbard and Blade and junior intramural manager, and Richard Davis, a member of Skull and Crescent, Der Deutsche Ve- rein, and the Indiana University orchestra.  NATHANIEL U. HILL President DARL MILLER Vice-President ROBERT PRICE Secretary ROBERT ANDERSON Treasurer 165 Pi Jlasnuda PJti ROBERT HIRSCHBERG President MEL UNGER Vice-President BOB WEISS Secretary LEO KLEIN Treasurer The Pi Lambda Phis through the years have earned the name of instigators of water fights in the East Third Street sector. That they plan to carry on this fighting spirit after joining the United States armed forces may be assured. Also assured is their plan to construct a new house on the cam- pus, that is if they can ever get their present mortgage paid on their old house. Always a fraternity with music-makers galore, this year is no exception. Nate Miller has a near- monopoly on band bookings, and Zeke Shapiro, the man who spent innumerable hours on the Student Government Committee only to see it fall through, continues to truck around a gang of guys which he calls his orchestra. Prominent among the Pi Lam activity men are Felix Bogart, secretary of Sigma Delta Chi; Ed Bell, a member of the varsity football team, and Hal Coleman, senior manager of the wrestling team and a member of Phi Beta Kappa. Pi Lambda Phi was formerly Phi Beta Delta until it merged with the national organization on Feb- ruary 1, 1941. Prominent alumni include Arthur Garfield Hayes, international lawyer, and Arthur Loew, of Loew ' s Incorporated. Founded at Yale University, 1895 Founded at Indiana University, 192f Thirty-four chapters 166 ft ft ft ftl ft 3 ft ft. ft O ' ! ft ft ft v lT •«• J • f f ?• • €■■' First Row HENRY AMSTER, Fr., New York, N.Y. ROBERT BAGNER, Soph., Evansville FELIX BOGART, Sr., Brooklyn, N.Y. HAROLD COLEMAN, Sr., Trenton, N.J. NATHANIEL COYNE, Soph., Hoboken, N.J. HAROLD DAVIS, Fr., Indianapolis ERIC ELLENBOGEN, Jr., Bloomington JEROME ENNIS, Fr., New York, N.Y. MILTON FOX, Jr., Ft. Wayne Second Row EUGENE GLICK, Jr., Indianapolis MILTON S. GOLDBERG, Jr., Linton MARCUS GOLDMAN, Fr., Indianapolis LENNARD GOODMAN, Fr., New York, CHARLES HAMER, Fr., Indianapolis ROBERT HIRSCHBERG, Jr., Gary JULIAN HOFFMAN, Jr., Belmar, N.J. SIDNEY IZSAK, Soph., Indianapolis MONROE JACOBSON, Jr., Kiamesha Lake Third Row SIDNEY JAFFE, Soph., Indianapolis MARVIN KLEINMAN, Fr., East Chicago JACK KLINE, Fr., Indianapolis ALBERT KOSNOFF, Sr., Goshen ALLEN LEVY, Soph., South Bend NATHAN J. MILLER, Sr., Bloomington AL. MOSKOWITZ, Jr., Schenectady, N.Y. JOE RABIN, Soph., Indianapolis GERSTEN RAPPAPORT, Sr., Brooklyn, N.Y. Fourth Row HAROLD RAPPAPORT, Soph., Indianapolis WALTER RODIN, Fr., Gary JACK ROSENBLOOM, Jr., Evansville BERNARD ROTH, Soph., Gary GORDON SAVER, Soph., New York, N.Y. LEONARD SCHATZMAN, Soph., Passaic, N ABE SCHUCHMAN, Soph., Indianapolis STANLEY SCHWARTZ, Sr., Brooklyn, N.Y. MONROE SCHWIMMER, Fr., Gary Fifth Row ISADORE SHAPIRO, Sr., Mishawa ka EDWARD SHARAVSKY, Fr., Gary MARK SHAVEL, Fr., South Bend LOU SOSIN, Soph., Hammond JOE STERN, Fr., Evansville MELVIN UNGER, Soph., Indianapolis NORMAN WILLIAM WEINSTEIN, Soph., Indianapolis BOB WEISS, Soph., Hammond 167 Founded at University of Alabama, 1 856 Founded at Indiana University, 1907 One hundred and thirteen chapters Slama AlnUa ofiluwt First Row ROBERT LEE AUSTIN, Sr., Anderson ROBERT A. BECK, Soph., Terre Haute ROBERT BENCKART, Soph., Bloomington WILLIAM E. BENCKART, Fr., Bloomington THEODORE E. BOCKSTAHLER, Sr„ Blooming PAUL BOROUGH, Jr., South Bend THOMAS S. BOWMAN, Soph., Odon CHARLES R. BRETZ, Fr., Huntingburg TOM BROWN, Soph., Sullivan GEORGE BUCKNER, Jr., Ft. Wayne LEN BUNGER, Jr., Bloomington Second Row FRED CARPENTER, Fr., Indianapolis REUBEN ALLEN CRAIG, Jr., Kokomo RICHARD CRAIG, Soph., Ft. Wayne ROBERT DEAN, Fr., Bloomington GREY DIMOND, Sr., Terre Haute ED EASTERDAY, Jr., Hammond ROBERT L. ELMORE, Soph., Washington JIM FARNER, Fr., South Bend EDGAR FERREY, Sr., Columbia City RICHARD B. FRANCE, Sr., Gary JOHN GADDIS, Fr., Anderson Third Row THOMAS GALLMEYER, Soph., Ft. Wayne KENNETH GARDNER, Jr., South Bend ROBERT E. GATES, Sr., Columbia City RALPH HAMILTON, Soph., Ft. Wayne JACK HAMLIN, Soph., Etna Green ROBERT HARVEY, Fr., Bloomington JULES HENDRICKS, Jr., Bloomington ROBERT HINES, Fr., Ft. Wayne MAX W. HOCKEMA, Jr., West Lafayette RICHARD M. HODSON, Jr., South Bend LOUIS HOWE, Soph., Cincinnati, Ohio Fourth Row RICHARD JOHNS, Soph., East Chicago KEITH KERN, Fr., Kokomo DAVID KOCHERY, Jr., Hammond WILLIAM H. KREITZER, Fr., Knightstown CLETUS H. KRUYER, Jr., Fr„ South Bend DICK LETSINGER, Jr., Bloomington JOHN LOGAN, Jr., Richmond JOE LOOS, Jr., Fr., Ft. Wayne BRUCE A. McART, Fr., Anderson DONALD McART, Fr., Anderson DONALD G. MAIN, Fr., Anderson Fifth Row JOE V. MARTIN, Soph., Muncie ROBERT MAXWELL, Fr., Indianapo JOHN PARKER MEISTER, Sr., India EDWIN MELVIN, Fr., Terre Haute TERRY MILLER, Fr., South Bend BILL MOORE, Soph., New Albany J. GRANT MOORE, Jr., Bedford ROBERT MORROW, Fr., Kokomo DONALD E. MUNSON, Soph., And PAUL NARCOWICH, Fr., Gary BYRON D. NESBITT, Jr., Rensselaer Sixth Row WILLIAM E. NIVEN, Jr., Indianapolis ROBERT PAVIS, Sr., Stolen Island, N.Y. JOHN P. PETERSON, Fr., Anderson WALTER ROBBINS, Jr., Jr., West Baden Springs PAUL ROBERTS, Jr., Lowell ROBERT B. ROBINSON, Fr., Ft. Wayne JOHN T. SCULLY, Fr., Gary BOB SEATON, Fr., Anderson BOB SHIMEL, Jr., Ft. Wayne PALMER C. SINGLETON, Jr., Hammond ROGER L. STULL, Jr., Bloomington Seventh Row JOHNNY SUDDOTH, Fr., Evansville ROBERT SULLIVAN, Soph., Bloomington JOHN A. SWAYZE, Jr., Kokomo JOHN TORPHY, Soph., Bloomington ERNIE VOGEL, Fr., Ft. Wayne CARL WALKER, Fr., Pendleton EUGENE G. WHITE, Sr., South Bend ROBERT J. WILSON, Sr., Omaha, Neb. TOM WINTERINGER, Fr., Robinson, III. JAMES B. WOOD, Sr., Terre Haute RICHARD WOOD, Fr., Terre Haute 168 The Madhouse of the Quad, commonly re- ferred to as Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, each year eagerly looks forward to two seasons — winter and spring. In the winter months the Sleep and Eat boys engage in frequent free-for-all snow fights with the Delta Gammas and anyone else who feels in a fighting mood. In the spring- time, they take up the interesting game of dunking each other in the mighty River Jordan. Their an- nual Gypsy Dance, too, is the particular pride and joy of the boys of Grand Hotel. In addition to studying incessantly, the S.A.E. ' s delight in pouring waste baskets filled with water upon any and all who enter the front portals. And then there is always the interestin g problem of keeping Bob Flap-Flap Gates ' activity points and waistline under control. Brother Gates has distinguished himself with one of the longest lists of activities of any student at Indiana University. His two most important positions are president of the senior class and president of Union Board. Other prominent S.A.E. ' s include Eugene White, 1941 football captain, and Ed Ferrey, night edi- tor of The Daily Student. LEN BUNGER President GEORGE BUCKNER Vice-President ROBERT PAVIS Secretary MARVIN WATKINS Treasurer fSl O P Fli p I ft 13 a IPII r PI r M % dk Atfe A 169 MARVIN SNYDER President ROBERT RAPHAEL Secretary SAMUEL NEW Treasurer The campus fraternity recognized as having the best dances as well as one of the better ping-pong players is Sigma Alpha Mu, located in the peace and quiet of North Fess Avenue residences. One of the few fraternities that has kept the yearly tradi- tion of pulling a fake murder to scare the pledges, the Sammys keep the citizens of this north part of the city well awake at night with roars of laughter and noises that float from their dormi- tory windows and echo in the distant hills. Night owls at the Delt house, in the same block, claim that these noises have been a major factor in their low scholarship rating. The shining light of the fraternity, besides the one over the door, is the scholastic achievement of the men who wear the octagon-shaped badge. Paced by seniors Edgar Siegel and Robert Gold- stein, both members of Beta Gamma Sigma, Sigma Alpha Mu won the Interfraternity scholarship cup for the highest campus average last year. Other prominent activity men are Jud Frommer, a night editor of The Indiana Daily Student, and Doovid Barskin, intramural ping-pong doubles champion and a member of Theta Alpha Phi. 170 Stoma Alpha Mu First Row NATHAN ADELMAN, Soph., Maiden, Mass. SYLVAN BAER, Fr., Louisville, Ky. DOOVID BARSKIN, Sr., Martinsville MACY I. BROIDE, Fr., Burlington, Vt. BERNARD R. BRONSTEIN, Soph., Huntington SIDNEY CAHN, Soph., Indianapolis DONALD H. DANN, Sr., New Castle ROBERT H. DANN, Fr., New Castle Second Row HAROLD DREBIN, Soph., Connersville JUD FROMMER, Sr., Indianapolis LAWRENCE FROMMER, PG, Indianapolis WILSON GITTLEMAN, Sr., Louisville, Ky. MORTON GOLDBERG, Jr., New Castle ROBERT R. GOLDSTEIN, Sr., Mishawaka PHIL GOODMAN, Soph., East Chicago WHITNEY J. GREENBERG, Sr., Indianapoli Third Row SAM S. LEVY, Soph., East Chicago ROBERT LINKER, Fr., Louisville, Ky. HERBERT D. LIPNER, Fr., East Chicag. ARNOLD MARKS, Jr., Indianapolis BEN F. MAY, Jr., Clayton, Mo. LOUIS MOSESON, Fr., Louisville, Ky. MELVIN NEVEL, Fr., Mishawaka SAM NEW, Jr., South Bend Fourth Row DAVE PEARLMAN, Fr., Lafayette LEONARD PRYWELLER, Soph., South Bei ROBERT RAPHAEL, Jr., Evansville BEN RICHTER, Jr., Gary IRVING L. SABLOSKY, Fr., Indianapoli: MARVIN E. SABLOSKY, Sr., Indianapoli EDGAR SIEGEL, Sr., Converse MARVIN SNYDER, Jr., Winslow Fifth Row IRVING L. SUMMERFIELD, Soph., Indianapolis PHILIP TROCKMAN, Sr., Evansville JOE TUCHMAN, Sr., Indianapolis MARVIN VIGRAN, Soph., Richmond SHELDON R. WAGNER, Jr., Ft. Wayne SHERMAN WEINSTEIN, Sr., Ft. Wayne SANFORD ZEIGLER, Fr., Muncie Founded at College of the City of New York, 1909 Founded at Indiana University, 1922 Forty chapters 171 First Row ROBERT AKIN, Fr., Indianapolis DICK BAUM, Fr., Elkhart DALE BIDDINGER, Fr., New Casl BUD BORNEMAN, Sr., Elkhart GIL BOSSE, Fr., Evansville TOM BRADY, Jr., Evansville FRED CARTER, Soph., Hammond ROGER CHESTER, Sr„ Elkhart PAUL CHIVINGTON, Soph., Indi DUD COLEGLAZIER, Sr., Salem Second Row DONALD DANIELSON, Sr., Pierre, S.D. GEORGE DECK, Fr., Indianapolis JAMES DEWAR, Fr., Oak Park, III. JOHN DRAPER, Fr., Gary BILL DYE, Jr., Detroit, Mich. ROBERT ELLIOTT, Jr., Indianapolis JOE GALL, Soph., Mishawaka FRANK HAMILTON, Soph., Terre Haute RALPH HANSELL, Soph., Kokomo JAMES HARRISON, Fr., Ft. Wayne Third Row ROBERT HOFFMAN, Sr., Ft. Way JOE HOLDERNESS, Fr., Angola DAN HOLTHOUSE, Sr., Decatur JOSEPH KEYSER, Jr., Mt. Carmel JOE KLOTZ, Soph., Noblesville JIM LAND, Soph., Kokomo ED LANDIS, Soph., Elkhart ROBERT LeFAVOUR, Jr., South B WARREN LEWIS, Soph., New Co JOHN LYBROOK, Jr., Gary Fourth Row WILLIAM LYON, Sr., Madison DONALD McCRACKEN, Jr., Paoli JAMES MclNTYRE, Soph., Auburn DICK MASON, Fr., Muncie JIM MATTHEWS, Jr., Bloomington LOUIS MONK, Fr., Gary BILL NEWHARD, Jr., Ft. Wayne CHARLES OSSENBERG, Fr., Evansville JOHN R. PAINTER, Sr., Alexandria JOHN PARTENHEIMER, Soph., Huntingburg Fifth Row CLAUDE PAYNTER, Fr., Salem HUBERT P1RKLE, Fr., Rockville CHARLES REDDING, Soph., Evansvil JOHN D. REED, Soph., Indianapoli ORAL RICKE, Jr., Shelbyville WILLIAM K. SAINT, Soph., New Co PERIN SCOTT, Jr., Madison RALPH SINGER, Sr., Indianapolis DICK STULL, Fr., Bloomington JACK STURGIS, Jr., Bluffton Sixth Row JIM SUBLETTE, Sr., Indianapolis DALE SWIHART, Jr., Elkhart WALLY TORRENS, Jr., Terre Haute BOB TOWNSEND, Soph., Bloomington FRED A. WIECKING, Jr., Indianapolis ROBERT E. WHITE, Fr., Michigan City DICK WHITTENBRAKER, Soph., New Castle JOHN WILSON, Jr., Temple City, Calif. JIM WOOLERY, Fr., Bloomington MAX B. WOOLERY, Jr., Bloomington ANDREW M. ZIMMER, Sr., Kentland 172 Stoma QUi Founded at Miami University, 1855 Founded at I ndiana University, 1858 Ninety-seven chapters Those long, lean, hungry-looking boys likely to be seen at any of the local joe spots probably hail from the Sigma Chi hostelry. Located on the corner of Seventh Street and Indiana Avenue, the Sig house is popularly known as Three Floors of Fun and Frolic. The principal topic of conversation among the lads during the course of the year centered around whether to buy a goat or a mule to replace Caesar, Great Dane mascot, who flunked out last year and was not able to return this year. Another question on which the boys are almost evenly divided is whether to join the Army or Navy. At present seven members are in advanced military and a like number have enlisted in the V-7 Navy class. Activity men of the fraternity include Prexy Don Danielson, vice-president of Sphinx Club; Dan Holthouse, editor-in-chief of The Daily Student during the second semester; John Painter and Jim Sublette, circulation manager and advertising manager of The Arbutus, respectively, and Hank Ricke, a member of Union Board and Sphinx Club. The Sig house always can be detected from other fraternities by the continual noise from their juke box, a hobby of several of the lads. DONALD DANIELSON President JOHN PAINTER Vice-President BILL LYON Secretary JOHN WILSON Treasurer 173 Stoma J lu WILLIAM H. ARMBRUSTER President ROBERT W. COLLETTE Vice-President FRED F. MORRIS Secretary MAURICE R. KIRKWOOD Treasurer Situated in the honky-tonk of Bloomington is Kirkwood Kastle, more sacredly referred to as the Sigma Nu house. Ideally located, it is within a few steps of church, cinema, cafe, campus, but not coed. On one of its three floors of fun and frolic is the most famous of inside shower rooms in ex- istence — ten thousand dollars worth. It is even rumored and not denied that the brothers use it for their pledging headquarters. In the springtime when love is a young Sig Nu ' s fancy, many an innocent coed can be seen fleeing from the locality after being sent into hysterics by the yoo hoo gestures of the Kastle dwellers. Extra-special luminary of the fraternity is Bob Frank, business manager of The 1942 Arbutus, the man who seldom gets to know any coed too well. The strange pet pastime of Brother Frank is to round up twenty cents from an innocent pledge, walk up town, and sit contentedly in the back row of a theater balcony to watch the double feature. As a direct contrast to Brother Frank is Maury Kirkwood, president of the Board of Aeons, and grader of papers in the School of Business. For four years Brother Kirkwood has been fighting to keep from making an A minus in any of his courses. Founded at Virginia Military Institute, 1 869 Founded at Indiana University, 1 892 Ninety-seven chapters 174 First Row JOE ADKINS, Fr., Indianapolis WILLIAM H. ARMBRUSTER, Sr., Seymou JACK BECKNELL, Jr., Indianapolis JAMES W. BIDDLE, Fr., Anderson CLAUDE BOBILYA, Fr., Ft. Wayne BILL BORUFF, Fr., Lakewood, Ohio DALE R. BOWERS, Fr., Indianapolis JAMES BRIGGS, Jr., Crown Point REX CHADWICK, Sr., New Castle ROBERT W. COLLETTE, Jr., Ravenna, Oh Second Row BOB COWAN, Fr., Ft. Wayne ROBERT D. COX, Soph., Tipton WALLIE DUNN, Fr., Indianapolis JOHN ELLIS, Fr., Indianapolis WILLIAM EPPLEY, Fr., Indianapolis ROBERT E. FRANK, Sr., Anderson ROBERT GAST, Soph., Warsaw VIRGIL GING, Soph., Falmouth BUD GIVAN, Soph., Milwaukee, Wis. ROBERT GWIN, Soph., Shoals Third Row SAM GOOD, Soph., Warren JOHN P. GRAF, Jr., Indianapolis WILLIAM J. HAMMER, Fr., Middletown HARRY HENDRICKSON, Jr., Indianapolis DEAN HOPPES, Soph., Anderson CLAUDE J. HOLMES, Jr., Sr., Ft. Knox, Ky. PHIL HUFFINE, Fr., Tipton DAVID MIFFLIN JONES, Sr., Vincennes PAUL KENDALL, Soph., Petersburg MAURICE R. KIRKWOOD, Sr., Tipton Fourth Row RICHARD LAYMON, Fr., St. Joseph, III. MAURY LEHMAN, Jr., Ft. Wayne JOHN LEININGER, Sr., Akron BUD LUDWIG, Fr., Tipton ROBERT S. McCORMICK, Sr., Vincennes ROBERT McFARLAND, Sr., Vincennes JAMES PATRICK McGUIRE, Jr., Kalamazoo, Mi ROY MARSHALL, Jr., Fr., Columbus RICHARD S. MILLER, Soph., Lebanon RICHARD R. MORAN, Jr., Sr., South Bend Fifth Row FRED MORRIS, Jr., Indianapolis BUSTER PLATTER, Soph., North Vernon DON RATLIFFE, Fr., Marion DAVE REEVES, Soph., New Market ALLAN RHODES, Fr., Owensboro, Ky. VIRGIL W. SAMMS, Jr., Sr., Indianapolis JO HN SOMERVILLE, Jr., Bound Brook, N.J. JOHN SPAULDING, Jr., Gary WAYNE STICHNOTH, Fr., Goodland Sixth Row ROBERT SWAIM, Jr., Indianapolis DICK TACKETT, Fr., Ft. Wayne CLAY ULEN, PG, Lebanon JOHN VAIL, Soph., Michigan City JOHN VISHER, Sr., Evansville CHARLES WALKER, Soph., Nashville JOHN WILLIAMSON, Fr., Ft. Wayne THOMAS D. WILSON, Fr., Vermilion, Ohio BOB YOUNG, Fr., Ft. Wayne 175 Founded at Vincennes University, 1897 Founded at Indiana University, 1923 Thirty-two chapters e ( ama Pi First Row JOHN A. BAXTER, Soph., Indianapolis CHARLES D. BENEDICT, Soph., Vevay CRIST BLASSARAS, Soph., Anderson NORMAN LARUE BORTNER, Soph., Kendallv ROBERT BRIDGEFORD, PG, South Bend CHARLES CHESBRO, Fr., Wheaton, III. GEORGE D. COOK, Soph., Birdseye MAURICE DAVID, Soph., Nashville VANCE DIGGINS, Soph., Wolcottville Second Row EARL DOLAWAY, Jr CHARLES W. DUKES JAMES FISCHER, Sr., RALPH E. FISHER, Jr THOMAS C. FOWLER, J WILLIAM F. GARDNER, Fr., Gary BILL GLANT, Fr., Toledo, Ohio ROBERT W. HARE, Fr., Indianapolis MAURICE HAWBAKER, Soph., South B Port Allegany, Pa. Fr., Georgetown, III. Indianapolis South Bend Evansville Third Row PAUL HERTENSTEIN, Jr., Versailles AL HOSBEIN, Soph., St. Joseph, Mich. HENRY F. JACKOWSKI, Sr., East Chicago DONALD P. KING, Jr., Columbus JOHN E. KING, Sr., Seelyville HARVEY E. MESSLER, Jr., Bradley Beach, N.J. BLAINE S. NASHOLD, Fr., Orange, N.J. NORMAN A. NICOLAI, Soph., Indianapolis DICK PAUL, Fr., Evansville DANIEL PREGER, Jr., South Bend Fourth Row RAYMOND J. PRUSIECKI, Soph., East Chic WALTER S. PRUSIECKI, Soph., East Chicc HAROLD W. ROTH, Fr., Evansville STANLEY J. SEGAL, Fr., East Chicago GLEN E. SMITH, Sr., Versailles BEN STANDS, Jr., La Fontaine ARTHUR WEISMANN, Soph., Lyndhurst, NORMAN F. WHITE, Jr., Indianapolis GORDON R. WILLIAMS, Soph., Indianai WALT ZUHL, Fr., St. Joseph, Mich. 176 An often-talked-about topic by Sigma Pis is the Jordan River, which seniors will remember overflowed its peaceful banks in the fall of 1938 and almost caused brothers of the fraternity to take out flood insurance; for it was during that precipitating period that the sacred waters of the University ' s traditional river almost ran through the Sig Pi living room. Another topic of conversa- tion of which the lads often speak is their dormi- tory, guaranteed to be one degree above outside temperature at all times. Outstanding social event of the fraternity dur- ing the year is the Orchid Dance at which each attending coed receives one of these cherished flowers. Other traditions are an annual banquet given by the undergraduate members in honor of the seniors, a Christmas dinner for a number of the city ' s underprivileged children, and a Founder ' s Day banquet. Prominent members of the fraternity are Earl Dolaway, Sphinx Club member and pigskin-kicker de luxe; Glen Smith, fellow Sphinxer, who keeps the Redbook and Y.M.C.A. Senior Cabinet un- der control; and Jim Fischer, who is a member of the Collegiate Chamber of Commerce and senior football manager. PAUL HERTENSTEIN President EARL DOLAWAY Vice-President ARTHUR WEISMANN Secretary DANIEL PREGER Treasurer p fa i ft fa] C% ■J ! ft a ft ft ft fa ft 77 AL BRAGALONE President LLOYD HIATT Vice-President BOB ROMINE Secretary W. H. ROWELL Treasurer Overlooking the Quadrangle and commanding an excellent view of the Alpha Chi, Delta Gamma and Z.T.A. sorority houses, the Theta Chi fraternity — sometimes known as Moeller ' s Meat Market — stands in its red-bricked a nd white-columned splendor. What is beginning to amount to a tradition in the Theta Chi house is the use of their over-worked loud-speaker system, especially for Homecoming decorations. The boys used a boat for their theme this year, and although it did not win the grand prize, they still claim it made quite a splash. Another Theta Chi tradition is Moose Moeller, who is president of Sphinx Club and also has Union Board and Blue Key behind his name in The 1942 Arbutus. Moose and three brothers, Kenny Smith, Russ Deal, and Al Bragalone, all bolstered the forward wall of the Crimson football team this year. Skinny Spencer of The Daily Student gang is a member of Sigma Delta Chi, and brother Jim Antrim is often seen around the rooms of the In- terfraternity Council, of which he is president. Theta Chi has as its outstanding social events of the year an annual Barn Dance and Pig Dinner. 178 Ueia GUi First Row JAMES ANTRIM, Sr., Chicago, III. GEORGE BARNETT, Jr., Evansville ROBERT BINGHAM, Jr., Bloomington GEORGE BRICKLEY, Sr., Muncie AL BRAGALONE, Sr., Campbell, Ohio JACK DEAFENBAUGH, Soph., South Bend RUSSELL DEAL, Soph., Bicknell RICHARD ENGLISH, Soph., Terre Haute E. D. EUTZLER, Soph., Mishawaka Second Row JOHN D. FALLS, Sr., Hamr JOE HAAS, Soph., Gary F. C. HEDGES, Jr., Jr., Ga ALVIN L. HENRY, Jr., Seyi CHESTER A. HICKS, Jr., Sw LLOYD HIATT, Jr., Indianc BOB HOWDEN, Fr., Mt. V ED KRONER, Fr., Gary TOM KURTZ, PG, Ft. Myer -ayzee polis Third Row WILLIAM LEONARD, Soph., Blooming BILL MANKIN, Fr., Terre Haute DON MASON, Jr., Owensville LOGAN MILLER, Jr., Princeton KENNETH MOELLER, Sr., Ft. Wayne EVAR DARE NERING, Jr., Gary ALLAN NUSBAUM, Fr., Bremen BOB ROMINE, Jr., Bloomington W. H. ROWELL, Jr., South Bend Fourth Row ROGER RUMPH, Jr., Seymour MANUEL SIERRA, Fr., Gary ROBERT SLINKARD, Jr., Terre Haute ROBERT SMART, Jr., Morocco KENNETH SMITH, Sr., Piqua, Ohio WILLIAM SPENCER, Jr., Peru DON STERRETT, Fr., Muncie MERLIN SUMMERS, Sr., North Liberty PHILLIP SWAN, Fr., Gary RUSSELL TERHUNE, Fr., Indianapolis Founded at Norwich Military Academy, 1 856 Founded at Indiana University, 1921 Fifty-two chapters 179 First Row MARGIE BUCKMASTER, Soph., Portia RUTH ALICE CAREY, Fr., Westfield MARY LOU CARMICHAEL, Soph., Blooi EMMA LOU CAVANAUGH, Jr., Wash SUZANNE MARIE CORCORAN, HELEN L. DAVIS, Sr., Westfield ELOISE DEAHL, Sr., South Bend PATRICIA DROIT, Soph., Evansv JUNE ELKINS, Sr., Evansville JUNE ENOCH, Jr., Ft. Wayne MARGARET THERESE FARGO, Second Row I PAT FELIX, Jr., South Bend MARG ARET FROESCHKE, Sr., Linton MARY FUCHS, Soph., Evansville ngton JANE GAFF, Sr., South Bend Washington HELEN GERY, Sr., Darlington CATHERINE J. HANCHER, Sr., Elwood Washinglon PATRICIA E. HEATH, Fr., Robinson, III. SHIRLEY KEYES, Soph., Peru ANNE KINGSOLVER, Fr., Ft. Knox, Ky. Me MARTHA LAUDEMAN, Sr., Elwood VIRGINIA LUDWICK, Sr., South Bend Third Row BARBARA LYON, Fr., Terre Haute PATRICIA McCAFFERY, Fr., South Bend BARBARA McPIKE, Jr., Bloomington BARBARA MAIL, Fr., Robinson, III. ROSEMARY MINER, Sr., Pendleton PATRICIA MUNGOVAN, Soph., Ft. Wayne PEGGY MYERS, Jr., Wilkinson ANN OLSON, Fr., Gary CARMEL PECKINPAUGH, Soph., Mount Summ PHYLLIS GOODWIN PETERSON, Soph., Darlingto PRISC1LLA PHIPPS, Fr., Pendleton Fourth Row REBECCA PHIPPS, Fr., Pendleton BETTY JANE PRINZ, Jr., Louisville, Ky. EMILIE RICHARDS, Soph., Roanoke JUNE RICHARDSON, Jr., Westport JEAN SCHARNBERG, Soph., Michigan City MARGE SCHNEIDER, Soph., Evansville JUDEE SHOLTIS, Soph., Gary MARION JUNE SPECHT, Soph., Gary POSEY SPERRY, Fr., Nashville VIRGINIA STEVENS, Sr., Mishawaka MARY ELLEN STIMSON, Jr., Bloomington Fifth Row JANE STINGLE, Sr., Ashley MARY EDITH STRACHAN, Fr PAULINE TAYLOR, Sr., Colur VERNA DELL TAYLOR, Soph., CANDY THOMPSON, Sr., Ev HELEN TURNER, Soph., Koko JOAN VEIT, Sr., Union City NANCY WHIPPLE, Soph., Va PHYLLIS WILCOX, Soph., In MIRIAM WISE, Soph., Mila EMILY ZANKL, Jr., Indianap Ipara dianc 180 Alpha GUi Qmeaa Founded at DePauw University, 1 885 Founded at Indiana University, 1922 Forty-eight chapters Home of several rodesses, assorted bridge play- ers, and lyres, the sorority ' s pin, is Alpha Chi Omega ' s English-looking lodge perched atop the southeast terrace of the Quadrangle. Deserted for married life by Mrs. Byron Nesbitt, former beauty queen Margie Buckmaster, the Alpha Chis have kept up their social prestige by letting S.A.E. ' s, Delta Chis, and Theta Chis walk them to their daily classes. Among the social events of the year of the Alpha Chis are two parties. The first is held before Christmas vacation in honor of Dean Kate H. Mueller and Assistant Dean Lottie M. Kirby at which time razz gifts are presented to them. The second is a party in March for underprivileged children in Bloomington. Representing Alpha Chi in many activities is Margaret Fargo, president of Tau Kappa Alpha and a member of Mortar Board. Prexy Joan Veit of Mortar Board also is a member of Pleiades. Jane Gaff is a member of the Senior Council of A.W.S. as well as being a member of Pleiades. This year Del lie Taylor was one of five coeds se- lected as The 1942 Arbutus queens. CANDY THOMPSON President JUNE ELKINS Vice-President HELEN GERY Secretary EMILY ZANKL Treasurer 181 AlpJiG, jbelta Pi ELLEN TAYLOR President RUTHE EDWARDS Vice-President HELEN MOORE Secretary JANICE ROBEY Treasurer The lawn of the Alpha Delta Pi house could never be No Man ' s Land, regardless of how close the Japs might come; for the D.U. ' s would still be there, cutting across the sorority ' s nice green grass. However, the sisters generally are very quiet about the whole thing except when these same boys try to interfere with their fall and spring baseball games in the front yard. The daily doings of the Delta dears this year have consisted mainly of being photographed by Helen Glenn, graduate counselor and treasurer of Theta Sigma Phi. The pledges also have taken particular pride in keeping the traditional secret diary of the doings of upperclassmen. Outstanding social event of the year for the A.D.Pis is the traditional Colonial Dinner celebrat- ing Founder ' s Day. The annual Bowery Brawl also is prominent in the sorority ' s social calendar. Prexy Ellen Taylor leads the luminary list of the A.D.Pis, being a member of the Y.W.C.A. Cabinet, Le Cercle Francois, the A.W.S. Defense Committee, and treasurer of the Pan-Hellenic Council. Vice- president of the sorority, Ruthe Edwards, is a member of Pleiades and Alpha Lambda Delta. Founded at Wesleyan Female College, 1851 Founded at Indiana University, 1926 Sixty chapters 182 First Row ALICE BRYAN, Fr., Gaston JANET CONN, Fr., Knightstown RUTHE EDWARDS, Jr., Gary RUTH FROBERG, PG, Bloomington HELEN GLENN, PG, Macon, Go. CARIDOYNE GRAY, Soph., Bloomington MARION HOFFMAN, Soph., Peru Second Row FRANCES KNOX, Soph., Indianapoli: RUTH LEFFORGE, Sr., Wabash MARJORY MARTINSON, Soph., Hine HELEN MOORE, Sr., Gary AUDREY MUNDY, Fr., Bloomington ERNESTINE PARR, Soph., Culver RITA REEL, Sr., Vincennes Third Row JANICE ROBEY, Sr., Indianapolis VIRGINIA SAMPSON, Soph., Glen MARY SCHILLING, Sr., Indianapoli VICTORIA STEVENS, Soph., Indianc ELLEN TAYLOR, Sr., Honolulu, Ha ' MARY TENNELL, Sr., Bloomington 183 Founded at Barnard College, 1897 Founded at Indiana University, 1916 Fifty chapters AlnJia Qmicsi n Pi First Row JULIANA BANE, Soph., Ft. Wayne JEANICE BARTLING, Sr., Ft. Wayne BETTY BATES, Jr., Joliet, III. BETTY BECK, Soph., Flora DOROTHY J. BILLINGS, Sr., Greensbu. BETTY BONATH, Sr., Hobart HELEN BURTON, Jr., Sandborn VIRGINIA CATRON, Soph., Bloomfield ELSIE CHALFANT, Jr., Griffith MARY LEE CLINE, Fr., Lebanon Second Row MARGERY DEAN COHEE, Sr., Frankfort ELEANOR CONNER, Soph., Evansville VIRGINIA COOPER, Soph., Kokomo MILDRED MAE COOPER, Sr., South Bend MARY CRAVEN, Fr., Laredo, Texas KATHRYN ADELE CURRENT, Soph., Topeka CATHERINE DAVIS, Soph., Jeffersonville RAE DAVIS, Soph., Ramsey RUTH DILLON, Soph., Atlanta, Ga. BETTE FEUTZ, Jr., Paris, III. Third Row JILL GIESE, Fr., Gary JANET HELM, Fr., Washington MARY JANE LAWSON, Soph., Dyer IRENE LIBER, Soph., Gary HELEN LITTELL, Jr., Bloomington ANNE LYBROOK, Soph., Galveston MARY ELIZABETH MclLVEEN, Sr., Bloomington NORMA LEE McCLINTOCK, Sr., Indianapolis DOROTHY MEISSNER, Soph., LaGrange, III. DOROTHEA MITCHELL, Fr., Marshall, III. Fourth Row DOROTHY CATHERINE MOORE, Fr., Bloomington MARGARET NUNN, Jr., Owensboro, Ky. BETTE NUSBAUM, Fr., Cass JUANITA FAUN PARKER, Fr., Cootesville VIVIAN PARRY, Fr., Valparaiso RUTH PARSONS, Soph., Dugger REBA PENDRY, Sr., Colfax BETTY PRUITT, Sr., Bloomington MAXINE ROBERTS, Soph., Indianapolis DOLORES SMALL, Sr., Hobart ANNE ELIZABETH SMITH, Fr., Tipton Fifth Row PHYLLIS GENE SMITH, Soph., Tipton HELEN SPENCER, Sr., Frankfort ROSE JEAN SPENCER, Soph., Crawfordsville VIRGINIA LOUISE STEELE, Soph., Claypool DORIS STEINMETZ, Soph., Evansville PEGGY THOMAS, Fr., Newberry MARTHA JEAN TIERNAN, Sr., Richmond AGNES E. TURMAN, Jr., Bellevue, Pa. CHARLOTTE WASSON, Soph., Evansville JEANE WEARLY, Jr., Montpelier MARY LEE WIBLE, Soph., Kokomo 184 Conveniently located on East Seventh Street where the girls can watch the passing parade of Delts and Sigma Chis, the Alpha Omicron Pi house is famous for its renowned patio, home of occa- sional goldfish and frequent duckings when one of the sisters takes a pin. The patio also serves as the center of decorations when the sorority stages its different dances. From the comparative safety of their castle the A.O.Pis have been known to brag about their paid mortgage. While not in classes or the Com- mons, the sisters spend their time denying all rumors to the effect that they intend to buy a new house. In the fall and spring the girls can be seen in the front yard lounging in their white lawn furniture. Prominent among the senior class are room- mates Dolores Small and Jeanice Bartling, who will at a moment ' s notice tell the effects of the draft on Indiana University coeds. Current rod- desses of the house are Betty Bates and Dolores Small of the staff of The Daily Student and Reba Pendry, who attends Pleiades meetings when she can talk her way out of the Home Economics diet kitchen. Prexy Elsie Chalfant is a member of Pleiades and the W.A.A. Board. ELSIE CHALFANT President REBA PENDRY Vice-President NORMA McCLINTOCK Secretary BETTY BONATH Treasurer 185 BETTY JEAN ROWE President HELLEN DAVIS Vice-President JEANNE TEANEY Secretary BETTY HALL Treasurer X and a horseshoe, that ' s the Chi Omegas! And if you have detected an educated air about this group of Quadrangle dwellers during the year, it is merely because their location behind the Music-Hall Auditorium puts them within screeching distance of the numerous speech classes. On a clear day when fog is not hanging over the River Jordan they just open the windows and soak up the culture. The coeds of Chi Omega have their share of the campus beauty queens, boress sessions, babes with bangs, bridge games, books, boots, and busi- ness students. However, it is probably one of the very few sororities on the campus whose members stand outdoors on a terrace when visiting frater- nities serenade, thereby claiming the doubtful dis- tinction of having more pneumonia cases per capita than any other sorority. Chi Omega counts among its noteworthy pos- sessions one cream colored convertible, one ex- pert equestrienne, a dozen assorted piano play- ers, eight members named Betty, and one birdbath, genuine stone. Outstanding sister is Betty Jean Rowe, vice-president of Y.W.C.A., and a member of the Board of Standards and Pleiades. 186 GUi Om fG, First Row MARJORIE BENNINGHOFF, Sr., Ft. ARLENE BILLERBECK, Soph., Winamo BETTE BOONE, Jr., Ft. Wayne MARIAN BRAUN, Soph., Hamilton, DOROTHY BUTLER, Soph., Fowler EILEEN CONNER, Fr., Ft. Knox, Ky. HELLEN DAVIS, Jr., Evanston, III. VIRGINIA GRIGGS, Jr., Mooresville BETTY ELLEN HALL, Jr., Indianapoll Second Row BETTY HARKLESS, Soph., Syracuse BETTY HAYDEN, Soph., Park Ridge, III. DONNA HINKEL, Fr., Hammond TEEN HOLLAND, Soph., Kenmore, N.Y. MARSELDA JACOBS, Soph., West Lafayette CAROLYN JOHNSON, Sr„ Crown Point RODY KEANE, Jr., Mitchell ROSEMARY LANDAW, Fr., Goshen SYLVIA LEGG, Jr., Terre Haute Third Row MARY ALICE MacCAA, Soph., Flossmore BETTE McDONALD, Sr., Ft. Wayne SHEILA McHUGH, Soph., Shelburn BETTY MARKERT, Jr., Logansport SARA MEILY, Jr., Logansport RUTH NEEDHAM, Jr., Ft. Wayne ELIZABETH NEFF, Sr., Ft. Wayne PAT NEWHOUSE, Soph., New Albany KATHLEEN O ' CONNOR, Jr., Logansport Fourth Row MARGARET PAULINE, Soph., Terre Haute LEAH PORTER, Jr., New Cumberland, W.Va PADDY PRICE, Soph., Hindsdale, III. BETTY REED, Jr., Indianapolis BETTY JEAN ROWE, Sr., Milwaukee, Wis. ELEANOR SANDS, Sr., Three Rivers, Mich. BETTEE SCHUTZ, Soph., Gary MARJORIE SNAPP, Fr., Whiting MARTHA SPRADLING, Fr., Morocco JUDY STEWART, Soph., Aurora Fifth Row JEANNE TEANEY, Jr., Aurora JEAN THOMPSON, Soph., Rensselaer MARIAN TIRMENSTEIN, Fr., Indianapolis MARION TURNER, Jr., Toledo, Ohio LYNN VAN NATTA, Jr., Chillicothe, Mo. MARILYN WALKER, Soph., Pendleton RITA WATTS, Fr., Lawrenceburg IMELDA WELSCH, Sr., Ft. Wayne JANE WERKING, Soph., Richmond FRITZIE YEAGER, Jr., Indianapolis Founded at University of Arkansas, 1 895 Founded at Indiana University, 1922 Ninety-five chapters 187 First Row PAULA BAILEY, Fr., Ft. Wayne DOROTHY BARKER, Soph., Kokomo MARION BATTY, Fr., Chicago, III. MARGARET ANN BOHNERT, Sr., Jasper BETTY JANE CAMPBELL, Sr., Owensboro, Ky. MARY A. CARSON, Sr., Lafayette PHYLLIS CLARKE, Fr., South Bend MARGARET CUNNINGHAM, Fr., Bloomington BARBARA DEMMARY, Soph., Williamsport Second Row LUCILE DYER, Sr., Indianapolis JANET ELLIS, Soph., Boulder, Colo. JEANNE GIFFORD, Sr., Chicago, III. JOAN GOLDSMITH, Fr., Indianapolis BETTY HARRISON, Fr., Ft. Wayne VIRGINIA HAWLEY, Soph., Peru JANE HERMANN, Jr., New Albany BETTY LEE HOMAN, Fr., South Bend MARJORIE HYATT, Fr., Evansville Third Row AUDREE INGRAM, Soph., Connersville NORMA IRICK, Fr., Kokomo MARY JEAN JOHNSON, Soph., Paoli PHYLLIS JOHNSON, Fr., Bloomington MARY ELIZABETH KELLIE, Soph., Kokor MARY LAMBERTUS, Fr., Indianapolis ELIZABETH ANN LAVENGOOD, Soph., A MARY ANN McCREERY, Fr., Sullivan MILLIE MARSHALL, Jr., Bloomington Fourth Row CAROL JEAN MARTIN, Soph., Crown Point MARJORIE LOUISE MELLEN, Sr., Springfield, Ohio ALWYN ELIZABETH MILLER, Sr., East Chicago BETTY MILL ER, Sr., Manilla MARJORIE MILLER, Soph., Decatur BEVERLEE MUFF, Soph., Richmond EILEEN NEWBY, Soph., Indianapolis JEAN O ' BRYANT, Soph., Jeffersonville DOROTHY PEARSON, Soph., Bloomington Fifth Row JEANNIE PIERSON, Jr., Indianapolis JEAN ELLEN REDMAN, Sr., Garrett MARY JO REDMAN, Fr., Washington MARY DULIN RUSSELL, Sr., Paris, III. JO SCHWARTZ, Jr., Kokomo VIDA SEAMAN, Sr., Taylorville, III. DOROTHY SHAFER, Jr., Indianapolis PATRICIA JANE SIGLER, Sr., Cloverdale BETTY ANNE SMALL, Sr., Vincennes Sixth Row MARY JANE SMITH, Jr., Indianapolis RACHEL STONER, Soph., Tipton MAXINE SWAIN, Jr., Arlington RUTH TAYLOR, Jr., Boswell BETTY TUCK, Sr., Louisville, Ky. MARY LOUISE VANDIVIER, Jr., Franklin MILLIE COX VICKERY, Sr., Sheridan DOROTHY WALL, Soph., Remington MARIANNE WISEMAN, Fr., Bloomington 2 eua jbeua jbeua Founded at Boston University, 1888 Founded at Indiana University, 1917 Eighty-nine chapters The sisters of Delta Delta Delta, many of whose pa ' s work behind bars and are tellers — in banks of course — reside on Vinegar Hill, better known in these days as the East Third Street race- track. Still trying to keep up with their record of last year as the best singers on the campus, the Delta Delta Delta girls use their balcony off the second floor lounge for their numerous serenades, shivering in the dismal Bloomington weather while lending their voices to the night winds. Tri Delt pastimes include dashing to Stone ' s cafe, one hundred thirty paces via the back alley, and listening to the speech majors in the house offer amusement by reciting their pieces in the most extraordinary places at the most extraord- inary times. On top in the campus activity world are Prexy Mary Carson, president of Pan-Hellenic Council; Jeanne Gifford, a member of Pleiades, Pan-Hel- lenic Council, and the business staff of The Daily Student, and Virginia Hawley, a member of the sophomore staff of The 1942 Arbutus, president of Chi Gamma, and a member of Alpha Lambda Delta. Ruth Taylor is A.W.S. Social Chairman. MARY A. CARSON President BETTY TUCK Vice-President MARGARET ANN BOHNERT Secretary JO SCHWARTZ Treasurer 189 3 eua Cjamma PATT NICHOLS President DOROTHY LOWEY Vice-President BARBARA FRASER Secretary ARDELL WELTER Treasurer Whether D.G. means Dream Girl or Darned Good, these letters are applied to the fifty-odd wearers of the little golden anchor. Their ship is harbored in the southwest corner of the Quad- rangle, and nearby is the famous meadow, site of many a D.G.-S.A.E. snowball battle. Perennial mistake of the Delta Gamma pledge class is their walk-out from study table which they heartily regret when they walk in. The D.G. ' s also have acquired the fame of having the most frater- nity pins in their possession, and some persons claim this is a result of their balcony which is so well designed for moonlight serenades. Betty Fraser heads the long list of Delta Gamma activity girls. She is co-chairman of the Coed- Counseling Board, president of lota Sigma Pi, and a member of the Y.W.C.A. Cabinet. Joan Doyle, Marguerite Brown, Kathleen O ' Banion, and Betsy Hutchings hang around The Daily Student office, and Betsy is a member of Theta Sigma Phi. Sophomore members of The 1942 Arbutus staff are Margery Hasbrook, Barbara Bercaw, Jane Schabinger, and Jean Schabinger. Barbara Meek was one of five coeds selected as The 1942 Arbutus queens. Founded at Lewis School, 1 874 Founded at Indiana University, 1898 Fifty chapters 190 First Row MARGARET ANTIBUS, Soph., Indionopoli KATHERINE DURHAM ARNOLD, Sr., Indianoi KITTY LOU BARTH, Fr., Milwaukee, Wis. BARBARA BERCAW, Soph., Whiting GINNY BLASENGYM, Fr., Indianapolis VIRGINIA BOUGHAN, Soph., Brazil MARGUERITE BROWN, Jr., Ft. Benjamin Harr CAROLYN CAMPBELL, Sr., Anderson PATRICIA CASSADY, Fr., Spencer PHYLLIS KATHLEEN CATT, Soph., Rensseh Second Row JEAN CLEMENTS, Soph., Evansville YVONNE CRAIG, Sr., Oak Park, III. MARY RUTH CRAVENS, Sr., Toledo, MARJORY CUTLER, Sr., La Porte MARTHA DECKER, Fr., Anderson SHIRLEY DEWAR, Sr., Oak Park, III. ELISABETH JOAN DOYLE, Sr., Bloom MARY PATRICIA DOYLE, Fr., Bloom ANN FINNELL, Jr., Elkhart ANNETTE FORD, Sr., South Bend ngton ngton Bloomington , Bloomington eland Heights, Ohi Third Row BARBARA FRASER, Jr., ELIZABETH FRASER, Jr MARIAN GRIFFIN, Soph., CI MARTHA HARTMAN, Sr., Evansville MARGERY HASBROOK, Soph., Indiar MARGERY HULETT, Fr., Hammond HELEN HUMPHREYS, Jr., Bicknell DOROTHEA HUNTER, Soph., Columbu BETSY HUTCHINGS, Sr., Indianapolis JANE KONOLD, Soph., South Bend Fourth Row PATRICIA KRIEGHBAUM, Fr., Rochester ALICE LIGHT, Fr., Ft. Wayne DOROTHY LOWEY, Jr., Huntington BETTY JANE LUSK, Soph., Bloomington PEGGY McDONALD, Fr., Bloomington CAROL McNIERNEY, Jr., Toledo, Ohio BARBARA MEEK, Soph., New Castle BETTY MORRISON, Soph., Kokomo JEAN .MORRISON, Fr., Kokomo MARGARET ANNE MORRISON, Sr., Kc Fifth Row PATT NICHOLS, Sr., Spencer KATHLEEN O ' BANION, Jr., Tipton PATRICIA PETERSON, Fr., Indianapoli SHIRLEY PLONER, Sr., Michigan City JOAN ROBINSON, Fr., Columbus MARTHA RUPEL, Soph., Indianapolis JANE SCHABINGER, Soph., Evanston, JEAN SCHABINGER, Soph., Evanston, MARY SUSAN SCHMALZ, Sr., Blooming MARTHA SLADE, Fr., Milwaukee, Wis Sixth Row BETTY STOWE, Sr., Hastings-on-Hudson, MARJORIE STUCKY, Jr., Ft. Wayne ELOISE STUMP, Sr., Richmond ELIZABETH THOMAS, Soph., Terre Haute FRANCES WALL, Fr., Toledo, Ohio RUTH MAE WALTER, Jr., Columbia City ARDELL WELTER, Jr., Gary MARY ANN WHEELER, Jr., Princeton JANE YOUNG, Fr., Huntington 191 Founded at DePauw University, 1 870 Founded at Indiana University, 1870 Sixty-four chapters Kgw2A2jg, Alfdta Ueta First Row SARAH ARNOLD, Soph., Greenfield JULIA ANN ARTHUR, Jr., Anderson ELAINE AX, Jr., Jasonville BETTY BAKER, Jr., Bluffton SALLY BEDWELL, Jr., Sullivan JEAN BERNARD, Sr„ Muncie NELLE BERNARD, Soph., Muncie NANCY WARD BIDDLE, Sr., Bloomington JANE BOBBITT, Soph., Kokomo BETTY BOHANNON, Sr., Terre Haute Second Row VIRGINIA BROWN, Fr., Indianapolis JOAN BROWNING, Fr., Toledo, Ohio ELISABETH COLE, Fr., Bloomington PATSY CRAIG, Fr., Gary ANN ELLER, Soph., Oak Park, III. SARAH ELLIOT, Soph., Bloomington JANETTE ESAREY, Sr., Bloomington LUCILE FLANINGAM, Soph., Thorntown JANET FLEEHART, Jr., Rushville CHARMAN FRAZEE, Soph., Rushville Third Row PATRICIA FRIGGE, Jr., Vincennes MARY JANE FUNK, Jr., Galveston JANE GILLESPIE, Sr., Indianapolis EMILY GLOSSBRENNER, Soph., Indianapolis ANNE HARRIOTT, Sr., Terre Haute PATRICIA HARRIS, Fr., Newark, Ohio VIRGINIA HASTINGS, Fr., Washington MARIANGENEEN HELVIE, Sr„ Valparaiso BETTY LOU HINSHAW, Fr., Kokomo HARRIETT HODGES, Soph., Louisville, Ky. Fourth Row HELEN HOLLAND, Soph., Bloomington SARAH ANN HULL, Soph., Connersville DOROTHY JUNE HUMPHREYS, Soph., Bloomington MARY LEE KEITH, Soph., New Albany GRACE KRATZ, Fr„ Gary MARY LAWLER, Soph., Hammond JOSEPHINE LEACH, Jr., Sullivan BETTY LETSINGER, Soph., Bloomington ELSIE ANN LOCKE, Soph., Indianapolis ALICE ANN LOUDEN, Fr., Bluffton Fifth Row MARYALICE MALCOMSON, Soph., Oak Park, JAYNE MILTEER, Sr., Gary FRANCES NEAL, Fr., Noblesville NORMA OVERBAY, Sr., Indianapolis HELEN KAY RAPER, Jr., Monticello BARBARA HOKE RANG, Sr., Washington ROSANNE RAWLINGS, Soph., New Castle ELLA JO REED, Soph., Ft. Wayne MARY FRANCES REES, Sr., La Porte MARY ELLEN ROBBINS, Fr., Bloomington Sixth Row LELA JANE ROSS, Sr., Bloomington JANET SCHENKEL, Soph., Huntington DOROTHY JANE SHIMP, Fr., Cleveland Heights, Ohi« SALLY WALKER, Soph., Indianapolis SHIRLEY WEHMEIER, Jr., Chicago, III. BETTY LU WENGER, Soph., Kokomo LETITIA WILLIAMSON, Jr., Bluffton VIRGINIA WILLS, Soph., Indianapolis JANE E. WINTERS, Sr., Indianapolis MARILYN YOUNG, Jr., Ft. Wayne 192 The Theta house is planning to fake over a new National Defense proiect to be given the name of the Sluss Avenue Power and Light Company, according to the latest reports from engineers studying the project in Washington. The project is the result of the Theta porch light, for years a guide for Betas walking home from the Library, which now will be turned into a beacon to light up a proposed airbase on the present location of the R.O.T.C. drill field. The possibility of this proj- ect was not discovered until recently when sabo- tage by gentlemen of Sigma Chi resulted in a three weeks ' blackout of the Theta porch. Outstanding tradition of the Thetas is Kite Day, held on the Sunday before Commencement in hon- or of graduating seniors. Common pastime of the Thetas is to sit on their front steps and watch mili- tary reviews by R.O.T.C. units. Highest activity girl on the campus is Mary Rees, vice-president of the senior class, a member of Mortar Board and Phi Beta Kappa, and president of A.W.S. Elaine Ax is vice-president of Theta Alpha Phi and is a member of the W.A.A. Board. Betty Lu Wenger and Sally Walker are on the sophomore staff of The 1942 Arbutus. ELAINE AX President SALLY WALKER Vice-President JOSEPHINE LEACH Secretary LETTY WILLIAMSON Treasurer 193 MADELYN PUGH President MARY ELLEN HINES Secretary NANCY LEE HERKLESS Treasurer Trademark and recognition sign of Kappa Kappa Gamma is the hand shake. This action has come to be known as the Kappa Goodnight. But even though Kappa keys have unlocked many a male heart, tests have proved they are useless for opening the sorority ' s front door after 1 1 :30 p.m. on Friday nights. The Kappas, however, have not taken the shortened Friday night hours too seriously; for they still have their dorm boresses, knittin ' , and bridge games to provide a never a dull moment element. This year Kappa queens came out in all their splendor at the sorority ' s traditional Snowball Formal, a direct contrast to their appearance the rainy November day they engaged members of Kappa Alpha Theta in an all-female football tussle. Kappa Prexy, Madelyn Pugh, leads the activity girls of the Golden Key sorority, being a mem- ber of Mortar Board, Pleiades, Theta Sigma Phi, chairman of the Senior Memorial Committee and a member of the staff of The Daily Student. Margaret Hillis is on the Student War Council and is a member of Sigma Alpha lota. President of the Modern Dance Club is Ruth Gordon, who also holds membership in Theta Alpha Phi and the Board of Standards. 194 Kappa KapAia Qcunma First Row JANE ALEXANDER, Jr., Terre Haute E. MARIE ANDREWS, Fr., Ft. Wayne NORMA J. BALLARD, Sr., French Lick MARGARET BOREN, Soph., Princeton BERNICE BROWN, Jr., Bloomington MARTHA CAUBLE, Jr., Bloomington BARBARA CLINE, Jr., Columbus KATE COLE, Jr., Peru CHARLOTTE COOPER, Jr., Anderson BARBARA CUTSHALL, Soph., Brazil Second Row BETTY RAE DAVIS, Jr., San Antonio, Texa FRANCES M. DUNCAN, Jr., Rushville PATRICIA FAILING, Soph., Indianapolis RITA ANN FISHER, Soph., Logansport SUSANNE GAVIT, Soph., Bloomington RUTH J. GORDON, Sr., Bryan, Texas CATHERINE GUFFIN, Fr., Gary MARIBETH HARRISON, Jr., Dayton, Wyo. NANCY HASKETT, Fr., Bloomington ANN HENDRICKS, Soph., Bloomington Third Row MARY ELIZABETH HENDRICKS, Sr., Martinsville ROSEMARY HENDRICKS, Jr., Martinsville NANCY LEE HERKLESS, Jr., Knightstown MARGARET ELEANOR HILLIS, Soph., Kokomo JANE ELIZABETH HINES, Soph., Auburn MARY ELLEN HINES, Sr., Auburn JEAN HINKSON, Jr., Dayton, Ohio LOIS RUTH INGALLS, Sr., Bedford CAROL I. KEENE, Jr., Elkhart KATIE KROEGER, Soph., Logansport Fourth Row RUTH ANN KUEHN, Jr., South Bend KATHRYN LANGELL, Soph., South Bene MARJORIE LITTLE, Jr., Indianapolis DEDE LUNG, Sr., Kokomo BO-PEEP McMILLIN, Fr., Bloomington MARY MARGARET MALONEY, Soph., Pe REBECCA ANNE MORRIS, Sr., Noblesvil SUSAN A. MYERS, Jr., Dayton, Ohio DAPHNE ELIZABETH PALMER, Fifth Row BETTY JANE PRATHER, Soph., Palesti MADELYN L. PUGH, Sr., Indianapoli: SUSANNE PUGH, Fr., Hammond BETTYE ANN RECKNER, Jr., Evansvilh JEANNE REESE, Fr., Brazil HARRIETTE RHETTS, Soph., Marion JANET K. ROSS, Jr., Belleville, III. MARY SAILORS, Sr., South Bend ANN SAYLES, Fr., Indianapolis SONYA SCHLEE, Jr., Indianapolis Sixth Row MARILYN SEWARD, Soph., Bloomington JANE H. SHOOK, Fr., Indianapolis BARBARA ANN SMILEY, Jr., Washington JOANNE STRAUSS, Jr., North Mancheste HELEN THIEME, Sr., Ft. Wayne VIRGINIA ELLEN THOMAS, He Dluk He JANICE LOUISE POPE, Sr PATTY WATT, Soph., Noblesville PATTY LOU WINGERT, Soph., Bloomington MILLIE JANE WORLAND, Soph., Shelbyville BETTY WULFMAN, Soph., Huntingburg Founded at Monmouth College, 1 870 Founded at Indiana University, 1873 Seventy-four chapters 195 First Row LORAINE BALL, Soph., Cannelton BERYL ANN BROWNELL, Sr., Valparaiso GRACE BYRNE, Soph., Evansville MARY ELIZABETH CALDWELL, Fr., Indianapoli BERNADETTE CASSIDY, Jr., Madison RUTH GIERZ, Jr., Chicago, III. CHARLOTTE GROSSKOPF, Fr., Indianapolis Second Row MARCILE A. IRLE, Sr., Col umbus EDNA M. JOHNSON, Sr., Bloomington GEORGE-ANNA LEIST, Fr., Columbus DOROTHY LUCCOCK, Jr., Joliet, III. MAXINE McCOLGIN, Fr., Milan WANDA McCOLGIN, Soph., Milan JOANNE McGEE, Fr., Greenwood Third Row BETTY MEADOWS, Fr., Columbus CORNELIA NICOARA, Jr., Gary MARGARET SCOTT, Jr., Connersvil JOYCE SMITH, Sr., Valparaiso HELEN TAGGART, Jr., Indianapoli: DORIS TUTTLE, Jr., Indianapolis RILEY VRACIN, Soph., Griffith 196 piu Mu Founded at Wesleyan College, 1852 Founded at Indiana University, 1920 Sixty-four chapters Beside the River Jordan and located squarely in the center of Quad activities is the Spanish villa with its sunken garden that the Phi Mus call home. The girls of this sorority are best known for their classy transfer students and for their beau- tiful spring dances, well-attended by everyone on the Quad. Since the sorority was southern born, the annual Dixie Day Dinner and Southern Ball are the biggest social occasions of the year for the residents of the white stucco house. As an incentive for higher scholarship, the pledges and actives race each year for the best grade average. As a reward the winning group is entertained by the losers at a bountiful dinner and then are taken out for the evening. Beryl Ann Brownell, as president of Theta Sigma Phi, editor of the Freshman Handbook, and a member of Pleiades heads the list of Phi Mu activ- ity gals. Prexy Marcile Irle churns the water for Oceanides, heads the Women ' s Physical Education Club, and also wears the blue and gold Pleiades cap. Wanda McColgin is on the Y.W.C.A. Council and is a coed counsellor. MARCILE IRLE President DORIS TUTTLE Vice-President DOROTHY LUCCOCK Secretary GRACE BYRNE Treasurer 197 PUi Omeaa Pi NELL JANE HIGGINBOTHAM President MARY K. HARRIS Vice-President LORENE REYNOLDS Secretary DOROTHY BOTTORFF Treasurer The wearers of the pentagon pin emblazed by the five points of a star are the sisters of Phi Omega Pi, who claim a strategic position in the center of fraternity row. The P.O. P. house is Span- ish styled with thirteen steps leading up to it through a lawn of evergreens. The girls take par- ticular interest in midnight snacks consisting of cokes and almost any other conceivable food. A prominent place where the girls spend spare mo- ments in boress and fun is before a huge fireplace at one end of the sorority ' s living room. The sorority traditionally observes its annual Rose Dinner, the Brown County Breakfast, and the Pentagon Prom. Another custom is the wearing of blue and white ribbons under their pins on Found- ers ' Day. Leading activity girls of the sorority are Dorothy Knoop, who is secretary of the Education Club, and Rebecca Guard and Marthada Vaughn, who are members of the social committee of Y.W.C.A. Prominent alumnae of Phi Omega Pi include Mrs. Joanna Fox, Y.W.C.A. secretary; Mrs. Lloyd Setzer, past national officer of Psi lota Xi, and Mrs. Fannie Weatherwax, secretary to the Dean of Women. Founded at University of Nebraska, 1910 Founded at Indiana University, 1922 Twenty-five chapters 198 First Row ROSEMARY BAILEY, Jr., Gary DOROTHY ELLEN BOTTORFF, Sr., Indiana) MARJORIE CATTELLE, Soph., Sturgis, Mi CAROLINE DAVIS, Jr., Crawfordsville JOSEPHINE EICHER, Soph., Wakarusa M. SHERRY ELLIOTT, Soph., Jeffersonville NAN FRENCH, Soph., Indianapolis Second Row JEANNE GRIFFITH, Jr., Indianapolis REBECCA JANE GUARD, Soph., North Bend, Ohi, MARY KATHRYN HARRIS, Jr., Bloomington NELL JANE HIGGINBOTHAM, Jr., Gary JANE KETRING, Fr., Goshen DOROTHY KNOOP, Jr., Gary RHEA McCOLL, Soph., New Albany Third Row DOROTHY PACE, Fr., Indianapolis LORENE REYNOLDS, Jr., Indianapolis VIRGINIA SHERTZER, Fr., Bloomington LUCILLE VALENTINE, Fr., Noblesville MARTHADA VAUGHN, Soph., Washington, D.C. BETTYE JEANNE WARING, Fr., New Orleans, La. 199 Founded at Monmouth College, 1867 Founded at Indiana University, 1893 Eighty-four chapters Pi lieta Phi First Row RUSTY ACKERSON, Soph., Logansport WHLOUGHBY ALLEN, Sr., Washington MURIEL ANDERSON, Sr., Indianapolis MARIANNA ASHBY, Soph., Ladoga CAROLYN B. BASH, Soph., Warsaw BARBARA BAYLESS, Jr., Shaker Heights ALICE BERNARD, Jr., Muncie AGNES PATRICIA BROWN, Sr„ Indiar JUNE BROWN, Soph., Indianapolis HELEN F. BUSARD, Soph., Rushville MARGERY CHESTER, Fr., Elkhart ipoli Second Row LOUISE COOKSON, Soph., Bloomington RUTH COOKSON, Jr., Bloomington JEAN DICKSON, Sr., Lowell MARY ANNETTE ELSNER, Sr., Seymour SHIRLEE ENDERS, Fr., Gary MARTHA FETTERLY, Soph., Elkhart MARY ROMAYNE FIKE, Fr., Bloomington TOOTS FRANK, Sr., Ft. Wayne BETTY FREED, Fr., Terre Haute BARBARA GIBSON, Jr., Bloomington MARY HATTERSLEY, Sr., Ft. Wayne Third Row JEANNE KEITH HAYES, Sr., Washington MARY ELLEN HAZEL, Jr., Bloomington JEAN HOLLAND, Fr., Bloomington WYNANDA INT-HOUT, Soph., Park Ridge, DOROTHY JANSEN, Sr., Indianapolis BARBARA JOHNSON, Jr., Knightstown ELIZABETH ANN KEHR, Sr., Toledo, Ohio DOROTHY KING, Jr., Birmingham, Mich. GLORIA LIENHART, Fr., Wakarusa MAXINE LOWE, Jr., Evansville MARJORIE McCAIN, Fr., Rushville Fourth Row MARJORIE MclNTYRE, Soph., East Chicac JEAN McKEE, Soph., Indianapolis JULIA MILLER, Jr., Russiaville BETTY JANE MITCHELL, Fr., Indianapolis BARBARA MOREY, PG, Decatur, III. BETTY JANE MOWRY, Jr., Lafayette MARIAN MYERS, Sr., Mayfield, Ky. HENRIETTA PARRISH, Fr., Bloomington WINIFRED PEARSON, Soph., South Bend SHIRLEY L. PIETSCH, Jr., Gary MAXINE PRICE, Fr., Bloomington Fifth Row JANE PULLEY, Sr., Warren FRANCES RENFRO, Sr., Spartanburg, S.C. JEAN RHEUBOTTOM, Fr., Wakarusa CAROL RICE, Fr., Columbus CAROLYN ROBERTSON, Sr., Brownstown MADELINE SCULLY, Sr., Gary JOSEPHINE SEARS, Jr., Elkhart MARY ANN SEXSON, Fr., Indianapolis BARBARA SMITH, Jr., Indianapolis ROBERTA SWAN, Jr., Gary Sixth Row MARILYN TAYLOR, Soph., Gary ALICE E. THOMPSON, Jr., Winamac MARY MARGARET THOMPSON, Soph., Wir MARGARET TORPHY, Sr., Bloomington MARJORIE VALE, Jr., Indianapolis JOANNE WATSON, Jr., Elkhart JEAN WEIL, Fr., Ft. Wayne BARBARA WELLS, Soph., Logansport MARGARET WELSH, Sr., Vincennes GEORGIA H. WILSON, Soph., Carmel, 200 Across from Alpha Hall and just out of smelling distance of the University Medical building is the residence of the majority of the sixty-four mem- bers of Pi Beta Phi. The atmosphere of southern hospitality seems to have brought results to the girls, for three-fourths of the Pi Phis are either pinned or engaged. It is reported that the other fourth are practice teaching. One of the more worthy organizations within Pi Beta Phi is the Intramural Widows Society, In- corporated, founded by Frances Renfro. The mem- bers of this unusual society spend two nights a week playing second fiddle to volley balls and aerial darts. Tradition of the sorority is the annual Razz Breakfast, at which time the undergraduates heckle the seniors and the last-year sisters return the razz. Barbara Johnson, one of the Pi Phis ' talented pianists, heads the list of names on the activity scroll of the sorority. She is publicity chairman of A.W.S. Council and is a member of Taps, Pleiades, Pro-Music Club, and Sigma Alpha lota. Madeline Scully is president of Pleiades, and Jean Dickson is probably the only editor of The Arbutus who ever became a member of Phi Beta Kappa. BARBARA SMITH President JOSEPHINE SEARS Vice-President MARIANNA ASHBY Secretary MARTHA FETTERLY Treasurer 201 SHIRLEY FINE President JUNE SPIEGAL Vice-President EVELYN SLUNG Secretary MILDRED HOROWITZ Treasurer The Sigma Delta Taus are keynoted by Betty Savesky, dynamic and sometimes cyclonic gal about campus, who has been art editor and night editor of The Daily Student and one of the more vociferous of the Theta Sigma Phis. She is also a member of Alpha Lambda Delta and was an asso- ciate editor of the Freshman Handbook. Supposedly the smartest coeds on the campus, the Sigma Delta Taus have topped all sororities in scholarship for the fourth consecutive semester. The Pan-Hellenic Scholarship Cup also has been held by the girls of East Eighth Street for two con- secutive fall semesters. Leading the pack on the Sigma Delta Tau list of activities is Shirley Fine, who has participated in many dramatic productions at the University Theatre and who this year had a leading role in the production The Women. Sophomore Fanny Friedland is a member of the Pro-Music Club and W.A.A. Mildred Horowitz is vice-president of the Hi Mel Student Council, and Blanche Schultz is sec- retary of the same Council. Another prominent sis- ter of Sigma Delta Tau is Ruth Marks, a member of Omicron Delta and the Accounting Club. 202 Sienna jbeita jama au First Row BETTY JANE BEITMAN, Soph., Indianapolis PEGGE BOBELE, Fr., Gary SYLVIA CAWN, Fr., Barbourville, Ky. BERNADINE DEE, Sr., Indianapolis LORETTA DINESS, Sr., Gary SHIRLEY WINIFRED FINE, Sr., New Albany Second Row FANNY FRIEDLAND, Soph., East Chicago MARYGOLD GLOGAS, Fr., Gas City MILDRED HOROWITZ, Sr., Brooklyn, N.Y. JACOUELYN JOSEPH, Soph., Shelbyville PHYLLIS LEVEY, Fr., Indianapolis EVELYN LEVY, Fr., Yonkers, N.Y. Third Row RUTH MARKS, Jr., Louisville, Ky. FLORENCE LEE MILLER, Sr., East Chicago NORMA MILLER, Jr., tndianapolis BETTY JANE SAVESKY, Sr., Marion ALBERTA SHALANSKY, Sr., Indianapolis MERIAM SICANOFF, Jr., Indianapolis Fourth Row EVELYN SLUNG, Sr., Seymour JUNE SPIEGAL, Jr., Anderson LOUISE STIEFLER, Fr., Marion GOLDIE JANE WASSERMAN, Fr., Loui LILLIE JEAN YOFFE, Soph., Seymou ille, Ky. Founded at Cornell University, 1917 Founded at Indiana University, 1940 Seventeen chapters 203 First Row WANDA MARIE BOWMAN, Fr., Ft. Wayne VIRGINIA CAMPBELL, Jr., Evansville BETTY J. COMPTON, Fr., Hammond MARJORY COOK, Fr., Dayton, Ohio DOROTHY DEVINE, Fr., Ft. Knox, Ky. DOROTHY DIERKING, Soph., Jeffersonville ANNE DOUGLAS, Sr„ Shelbyville BETTE FORDYCE, Soph., Linton Second Row ELSIE GIESMAN, Jr., Evansville LUCY JANE HADLEY, Jr., Indianapolis MARTHA A. HARDIN, Fr., New Albany JOAN V. HEUSER, Fr., Speedway HELEN HILDERBRANDT, Fr., Evansville BETTYE KARGER, Fr., Evansville DORIS KONING, Sr., Indianapolis GERALDINE MAE KRUEGER, Sr., Cleveland, Ohio Third Row DELORES LACY, Soph., Ft. Wayne NORMA LAGENAUR, Jr., Indianapolis MARY JANE LARSON, Fr., Hammond MARY LOU LEE, Fr., Indianapolis DOROTHY MOLDTHAN, Fr., Speedway EVELYN MAE MORGAN, Sr., Indianapolis INGE PELIKAN, Jr., Evansville JOANNA MAE PHILLIPPE, Sr., Indianapoli Fourth Row JEAN RAGON, Jr., Hammond BETTY ANNE REGEL, Sr., Evansville ELEANORE S. RUTZ, Soph., Gary MARY SABIN, Fr., Dana ALICE SCHAFER, Jr., Evansville JEANNE SCHOONOVER, Soph., Huntington Woods GERALDINE SCHROETER, Fr., Hammond DELORES SEXSON, Fr., Indianapolis Fifth Row PAULINE SEXSON, Fr., Indianapolis JOAN SIMMONS, Fr., Terre Haute MARIAN WELBORN, Sr., Terre Haute ZAMA WHITE, Soph., South Bend MARION WILLIAMS, Fr., Marengo RUTH WITHERSPOON, Fr., Princeton WINIFRED YOUNG, Soph., South Bend 204 Siama Kafifici Founded at Colby College, 1874 Founded at Indiana University, 1918 Forty-eight chapters Overflowing with coeds from Indianapolis and Evansville, the Sigma Kappa house often is the scene of terrific bombings about the merits and demerits of the northern and southern sections of Indiana. Located in the urban section of Bloom- ington, technically known as Jordan Avenue, it offers a slight cross-country run for athletes who want to keep in training and at the same time look after pinned interests. The Sigma Kappa girls are most proud of their virtual monopoly of The Daily Student office and of the fact that Our Boy Billy Hillenbrand is a regular visitor at the house. As far as activi- ties go, Anne Douglas tops the list as editor-in- chief of The Daily Student, the first woman edi- tor of the local paper in four years. Sisters Wini Young and Jean Ragon also are Daily Student girls and creators of boresses that have reached campus-wide prominence. Traditional events that the Sigma Kappas spon- sor each year are their Mother and Daughter Din- ner before Christmas and the Daughter and Mother Banquet in the spring, at which times razz gifts are exchanged and poems of interest to both are read. BETTY ANNE REGEL President DOROTHY DIERKING Vice-President NORMA LAGENAUR Secretary JEAN RAGON Treasurer 205 $eta au AlpJixi MARY EMAHISER President BEATRICE HRUSKOVICK Vice-President DORIS CONNER Secretary BETTY LOU PHILLIPS Treasurer Situated in the southernmost part of the Quad- rangle is Zeta Tau Alpha, the sorority whose house is designed after an English Manor. Even though famous as being the only sorority on the campus with three living rooms, the girls of Z.T.A. forget their inside luxury rooms when spring rolls around and move out to their spacious back yard, where they lounge after the evening meal. Although the Z.T.A. house is located near the University School, the girls say the children never interfere with bridge games which they frequently play on the floor in the middle of their hall. Leading annual social event of the sorority is its Gay Nineties Party, sponsored by the pledges in honor of the upperclassmen. It is at this time that the girls dress up in their most ridiculous cos- tumes. In the poll positions of the activity race among the sisters are Prexy Mimi Emahiser and Little Annie Hooge, both of whom sport the little blue caps of Pleiades. Members of I.U. ' s red-garbed Drum and Bugle Corps are Pat Orrison, Jane Best, Mary Flo Miller, Betty Birely, Marty White, Har- riet Thornhill, Nancy Van Matre, and Marge Kranik. Founded at Virginia State Normal School, 1898 Founded at Indiana University, 1922 Seventy-nine chapters 206 First Row JANE BEST, Fr., Floyd Knobs BETTY JEAN BIRELEY, Fr., Ft. Wayne MARY ANN BLEW, Jr., Atlanta, Ga. IRENE CARSON, Soph., Indianapolis DORIS CONNER, Jr., Anderson MARY R. EMAHISER, Sr., Akron Second Row BETTY HAMVAS, Fr., Owensboro, Ky. ANNE HOOGE, PG., Mobile, Ala. BEATRICE HRUSKOVICK, Jr., Whiting STELLA KENNERLY, Sr., Speedway C. ELIZABETH KOLLMAN, Sr., Ft. Way MARGARET KRANIK, Soph., Gary Third Row MARY FLORENCE MILLER, Fr., Lynn MADONNA MORITZ, Sr., Ft. Wayne MARY PATRICIA ORRISON, Jr., South Bend BETTY LOU PHILLIPS, Sr., Indianapolis ANNE POTTER, Fr., Indianapolis VIRGINIA RUSH, Fr., Indianapolis Fourth Row MARTHA STEDMAN, Sr., Aurora MONA STEELE, Jr., South Bend HARR IETT THORNHILL, Fr., Indianopoli: MARY VAN DREW, Sr., Ft. Wayne NANCY VAN MATRE, Sr., Indianapolis MARTHA WHITE, Soph., Indianapolis 207 That sentimental gentleman of swing had the very difficult task of choosing one queen from these five beauties when he played for the 1942 Junior Prom. T. Dorsey thought it a pleasant occupation, however, since the girls are the beautiful Verna Dell Taylor, Margie Buckmaster, Barbara Meek, Pat Frigge, and June Brown. Miss Buckmaster was dis- qualified for the final judging when she left school offer her marriage. Introducing The Beauty Queen of Indiana University Mm VIRGINIA STEELE PAT GALLOWAY 217 BARBARA SCHAEFFER With none other than Tommy Dorsey ' s orchestra playing a mellow arrangement of Stardust, eds and their dates dreamed through the 1942 Junior Prom. The beautiful Pi Phi, Barbara Johnson, ruled over festivities as queen, having won the election from the other candidate, Evelyn Besing, repre- senting the independent students. Bob Anderson and the Prom Committee super- vised the decorations, obtained Tommy Dorsey, who incidentally got the wildest acclaim of any Prom band for years, took care of the publicity and handled the Prom Queen campaign and elec- tion. This year ' s race was intensified by the nom- ination of a third candidate, Leona Menze, backed by members of the Fourth Estate, who was with- drawn before the end of the quite unusual cam- paign efforts. The modernistic, surrealist decorations for this year ' s Prom were the most striking ever used for a dance in Alumni Hall. The swing composition painting by Stuart Davis, which was unveiled when the queen was presented, the modernistic columns, and the indirect lighting made the 1942 Junior Prom really an ultra-smooth, ultra-suave, extra- special, and super-perfect formal season finale. TOMMY DORSEY (Loft lo Right) Monroe Koontz, Ruth Tayk nan, Leona Menze, and Len Bunge 218 QgaMgsiq, 2wee t — 19 ' 2- Dutio.1 Pnxwt 219 jbanceb With the tables turned, the coed does the honors with the top coat on the night of the Dames Ball, taking care not to crush the beautiful corsage she gave her man .... Beginning the winter social whirl in white tie and tails and the slickest of slick formals, we dance at the Opening of the Formal Season .... With King Winter reigning at the first official formal dance, Herbie Holmes and the Cromwell sisters swing out in fine old Suthin ' style .... Having a wunnerful time, is this group at the annual Military Ball. It looks as if there must be something about a uniform .... Then there is always the Commons for the crowd that either gets tired of dancing, gets thirsty — but not for rationed cokes, of course — is hungry after hours of jitterbug- ging, just feels like Joeing, and oh, yes, there might be an intermission. iilll Hill lilifl tke yea . The latest in a jumpin ' , jivin ' , jitterbuggin ' , Virginia Reelin ' is hereby executed in true Southern style at one of the many informal dances at the Men ' s Residence Center .... Sigma Kappa gals solved the transporta- tion problem for the Dames Ball by taking their men to the dance in a big hay wagon .... Undoubtedly discussing Einstein ' s theory of relativity during an inter- mission is an enlightened foursome — or maybe they ' re just talking about the dance .... Hide and seek, or maybe ring around the rosy or maybe??? who knows? Enyhoo it ' s Marge Hasbrook and Fred Case .... And in this corner we have none other than king of the Dames Ball, Bill Hillenbrand, looking very smooth as he smiles for the camera with Joan Veit, chief crowner, helping out. Bill ' s date, Inge Pelikan, is out in front some place watching jealously. k. mi • • Ai. We. Waick and Compete, am. ATHLETICS • M M l L •v ' ' X i W. VtvVII :-. ' iy ' -£iJ. ' Just a stray Homecoming shot. Hillenbrand is good in practise to 224 at Great Lakes basketball ga Yell leaders Clyde Fox, Paul Narcowich, Pete Earley, Leroy Ford, and Vincent Zubras listen to boss Bob Gaston. 225 f Mm Thg Horned FrojJs Croaked SIGMA NU A.T.O. ALPHA CHI MEN ' S DORMS The D.U. ' s version of eat ' em, Indiana fea- turing a tribe of hungry, charcoaled freshmen set the pace in the race for decorations ' honors, in the minds of the Sphinx Club judges . . . The Kap- pas prayed to the Sun God the night before and came forth with a host of shapely tropical beau- ties . . . Sig Nus punned on Frogs ' war call in true Boot Hill style ... A naughty Freshman, legacy no doubt, saved the A.T.O. s time and trouble by posing with some burning newspapers and smoking scrap wood . . . Men ' s Dorms first morningers got the jump on the matinee gridiron classic with a double feature . . . Delts debunked the production power of the guests (the game proved that the Texans were wildcatters ) . . . Alpha Chi sweater girls taunted the Texans with the old army game. 226 FALL SPORTS ■• - ,; ' ... • 7«4e Qenesial Sta A. N. Bo McMillin, head football coach at Indiana University since 1934, has surrounded himself with top-notch assistants to aid him in his annual task of stopping eight or nine of the best teams in the country. The almost mythical feats of McMillin, accom- plished during his three years as regular quarter- back of the Centre College team, are still well re- membered in the bluegrass country of Kentucky and elsewhere. Bo ' s coaching career has been equally colorful. His election as head coach of the College All-Stars in 1938 was one of the high points of his rise to national fame as a producer of great football teams. Three of McMillin ' s staff are former pupils. Ralph Graham was an All-American blocking back on Bo ' s Kansas State teams of 1933 and 1934, and came to Indiana with McMillin in 1934. From that time he has served as backfield coach. Carl Anderson, head line coach at Indiana since 1938, played football for Bo at Geneva College. C. A. Tim Temerario also played for McMillin at Ge- neva College. Temerario served as Indiana fresh- man coach from 1934 to 1937, and returned from Denison University last spring to take over the job of varsity end coach. E. C. Billy Hayes and Branch McCracken are star-makers in their own fields of track and bas- ketball, respectively, but find time from their du- ties to serve as McMillin ' s chief scouts. A third double duty Indiana coach is W. H. Billy Thorn. Thorn has produced more Big Ten wrestling (Left to right) Tim Temerar Coach Bo McMillin, Carl Anders H. Thom. Ralph Graham, Head E. C. Hayes, and W. champions than any other coach in the league, and is line coach during the football season. Paul Pooch Harrell is freshman football coach, and adds a fourth name to the double duty list by being varsity baseball mentor. Gene White and Bo McMillin express, and we express, their feelings over the Old Oaken Bucket. 228 F O O T B A L L Mr mm % i k i HC i -- W £ W Young Bill evading two Nebraskans HILLENBRAND, William Francis . . . Sophomore . . . Evansville, Ind. ... 6 feet tall, 190 lbs. . . . Halfback supreme . . . All-American, NBC broad- casters . . . 2nd team All-American, Life magazine . . . Nation ' s Outstanding Player Trophy, Wail- ing Wall Club, Chicago . . . All-Conference, AP, UP, and INS . . . Sophomore of the Year, Satur- day Evening Post . . . Indiana ' s Most Valuable Player, Chicago Tribune . . . Gained 1615 yards . . . Figured in 1 4 of I ndiana ' s 15 touchdowns . . . ' nuf said? 229 1st Row — (left to right) Ricketts, lacino, Huff Harrell, Chelton, Mecklenburg, Coffey, Gwln, Evans Vomer. 2nd Row — Tavener, Sclipcea, Gall, Bragalone Trimble, R. White, Jurkiewicz, Elliott, G. White Deal, Moorhead. 3rd Row — Moeller, Zimny, Brown, Bell, Gayle Steele, Patty, Swihart, Preger, Myers, Hillenbrand 4th Row — Ronzone, Hasapes, Smith, Saban Jacoby, Doloway, Herbert, Robbins, Alford, Nash tyitei-Jltite Man Powe Not too bright were the Hoosiers ' prospects when only forty men, twenty-one of them sopho- mores, reported for duty in the fall. Twenty letter- men of the previous season did not return for vari- ous reasons, leaving in the experienced depart- ment just one tackle, Trimble; two ends, Nash and Elliott; three guards, Gene White, Bragalone, and Steele; two centers, Jurkiewicz and Moeller; and four backs, Doloway, Bob White, Swihart, and Herbert. Even the most enthusiastic supporter could not hope that the big crop of sophomores would de- velop into one of the greatest first-year aggrega- tions in the nation, a fact which proved itself as the season wore on. Bill Hillenbrand, first, rose to heights which few players reach in three years, being named one of the country ' s outstanding backs. Chuck Jacoby, teamed with the sensational Bill, admirably took over the spot slated for the injured Swihart. Lou Saban also came through, sacrificing his own tri- ple-threat potentialities to become the chief blocking back. In the line perhaps the greatest surprise was John Tavener, revamped fullback, whose play at defensive center early in the season labeled him as the best first-year lineman in the Conference. Sophs Ed Bell, Bob Zimny, Fred Huff, and Pete lacino more than adequately filled the gaping tackle vacancies, while Ted Hasapes took over a regular end assignment. Kenny Smith and Charlie Steele, both seniors, became standouts when given starting assign- ments after two years of relief work. Bob White and Doloway alternated effectively in the full- back role. 230 SbediccUed Jo. ,tUe 4 ioAlt 1st Row — (left to right) Galbroith, Deck, Black, Tackett, Gambino, Faller, Young, Dean, Kokos, As- sistant Coach Widaman. 2nd Row — Hannum, Prescott, Hollett, Vercuski, Combs, Levi, Caplitz, Xanders, Zuzga, Hall, As- sistant Coach Sabol. 3rd Row — Becker, Waller, Garmong, Dewar, Pihos, Cowen, Boehnicka, Dawson, Chesbro, Assist- ant Coach Danielson. 4th Row — Manager Bublitz, Walker, Kerins Linonis, Bossett, M. Saban, Feigen, Biddle, McKin- nis, Johnson, and Freshman Coach Pooch Harrell. Early autumn found head freshman football coach Paul Pooch Harrell drilling a small squad of some forty freshman grid aspirants. The previous freshman squad of Hillenbrand, Saban, Jacoby, Hasapes and company were proving their worth as members of the varsity squad. Things were no different than they were at the same time any other year, except perhaps the size of the new rhinie squad. They were all striving for the same things every freshman gridder seeks to attain . . . recognition, numerals, and one day, a varsity letter. Long afternoons of hard work under the tutelage of Pooch and his assistants, Al Sabol, John Widaman, Dan Danielson, Bob Haak, and Branch McCracken, brought out the best these ex-high schoolers had to give. Sabol, Widaman, Haak, and McCracken tutored the linemen while Danielson and Harrell drilled the squad in the McMillin system in general. Passing weeks of practice saw a general smoothing up of funda- mentals, timing, and team play among this group which had never functioned as a unit previously. The freshman squad played their part well in preparing the varsity for each week ' s game by running plays of the opposi- tion against McMillin ' s crew. (ft CJ (Lower right corner) Managers Len Bunger, Bob Arnold, Jim Fisher, Ben Shera, and Carl Cheadle with Assistant Athletic Director George Gardner (seatea ) . (Below) Bo instructs the Freshmen before the annual Powwow game. F Rhinies vs. Varsity WALT JURKIEWICZ EARL DOLOWAY CHARLES STEELE U% BILL HILLENBRAND FRED HUFF •M 0fc (Above) Jacoby (15) leaves Detroit forward defenders behind on a sweeping reverse during the season opener. (Below) Doloway ready to uncork one to Smith (right) as Herbert blocks a Notre litcM Aa ea An inexperienced and injury-riddled Crimson eleven raised the curtain on the ' 41 season by dropping a bitterly contested 14-7 decision to Detroit ' s Titans at I.U. ' s Memorial Stadium. The veteran Titans showed a smooth-func- tioning ground and air attack, as well as a fast charging forward wall, which featured the vi- cious play of All-American center Vic Banonis. Detroit scored in the second period on a long pass over the Indiana safety man ' s head, and once again in the fourth quarter after a sus- tained drive of 63 yards. Banonis kicked both extra points from placement. The Hoosiers came through with plenty of offensive punch in the third quarter when Hil- lenbrand and Jacoby, sophomore backs, alter- nated ball-toting chores and lived up to pre- season expectations. One drive ended with a 1 2-yard jaunt to the goal line by Hillenbrand, after which Captain Gene White knotted the score at 7-7 with the extra point. Bucking the fighting Irish of Notre Dame, who incidentally had one of their best teams since the days of Knute Rockne, Indiana lost, 19-6, in a driving rain at South Bend. The Crim- son showed streaks of good playing and kept the Irish on the alert during the entire game. Angelo Bertelli kept his Notre Dame team in the lead with his accurate bullet passes. The sophomore ' s pitching was the main difference between the two squads. Indiana ' s touchdown came shortly after the final Irish tally on a fast pass from Doloway and a heady bit of work by Kenny Smith. Earl threw to Kenny on the Notre Dame 20-yard stripe, and as he was about to be tackled, he lateraled to Jacoby who outraced an Irish tackier to the goal line. John Tavener, Indiana sophomore center, re- ceived nation-wide acclaim for his splendid de- fensive game in thwarting Notre Dame ' s efforts to make gains through the center of the line. BOB ZIMNY 232 (Above) Hillenbrand picks off a Cornhusker. Harrell (26) makes sure he doesn ' t get away. BOB WHITE KENNY MOELLER GENE WHITE rf-ixujA. ' A in, Paute Wi U By air they came! With Kyle Gillespie direct- ing and bombing at long ranges, the Horned Frogs of Texas Christian outlasted the Hoosiers, 20-14, in a thrilling aerial dual before a Home- coming crowd of 23,000. All five touchdowns resulted from well-aimed tosses, Hillenbrand beginning by grabbing Dol- oway ' s first attempt and squirming through for a touchdown before late-arriving fans were seated. Gillespie wasted no time retaliating and culminated a field-long drive with a 40- yard touchdown pass to tie the score, 7 -7 . The Frogs surged ahead in the third quarter by mixing deceptive reverses with spot passes to score twice and take a 20-7 lead. Indiana ' s aerial thrusts began clicking again and a long one from Hillenbrand to Jacoby put the Crimson back in the game. Dependable Gene White converted his second extra point melting down T.C.U. ' s lead to 20-14. Indiana ' s final bid ended on the Frogs ' 6-yard line. Smarting from three setbacks in a row, the Hoosiers tasted the sweetest kind of victory in knocking Nebraska out of the ranks of the un- defeated. The Huskers, who just last year played in the Rose Bowl for the mythical na- tional title, found they were no match for a kid named Bill, who ran and passed the Crim- son to three touchdowns and a 20-13 upset. Until that game everybody conceded that Hil- lenbrand was good; Nebraska established his greatness. The Huskers opened the scoring late in the first quarter as Allan Zikmund broke through tackle for a 60-yard touchdown. Near the end of the first half Hillenbrand and Doloway alternated in carrying the ball, then Hillenbrand finally plunged over from the 2-yard line. The next score was Bill ' s tremen- dous 50-yard pass to Jacoby on the goal line. Hillenbrand was again the spearhead of the attack as he passed the final tally to Smith. DALE SWIHART 233 EDDIE HERBERT RUSSELL HARRELL PETE IACINO RUSSELL DEAL TED HASAPES ED BELL CHUCK JACOBY BadfjeM. Worked Ha de Pitting their triple-threat sophomore fullback, Pat Harder, against Indiana ' s equally versatile halfback, Bill Hillenbrand, Wisconsin eked out a 27-25 win over the Hoosiers in a wild-scoring, fast-action touchdown carnival. Harder showed his hand early, leading his mates to two quick touchdowns before the Hoo- siers organized their forces. Hillenbrand then took the stage and passed a touchdown to Jacoby, following up with an 88-yard punt runback for the second Crimson tally. Injured Gene White failed on both conversions and Indiana trailed 14-12 at the half. It was Hillenbrand again in the third quarter who rifled one to Kenny Smith to put Indiana ahead, 19-14; but Harder then made a return ap- pearance in the starring role and set up two more touchdowns for the Badgers. With little time left to think of caution, Hillen- brand started throwing passes from his own 1 -yard line. Three tosses, all good, netted 99 yards and a touchdown. Lou Saban caught the third one and romped over. SltucJu!! We ' re not crying because a 13-7 defeat by Iowa is recorded in the books; but the score doesn ' t quite tell the story of how an inspired Hawkeye eleven reached its peak during the sec- ond half to turn back the hard-fighting Hoosiers. Hillenbrand scored in the opening minutes from the 26-yard line after being trapped on the 35 while trying to unloose an aerial. White convert- ed. Indiana missed another score by inches when Hillenbrand caught a pass from Jacoby a step be- yond the end zone which was ruled out of bounds. Iowa came out the second half and gave the Homecoming crowd a tremendous show by turn- ing the tables and running roughshod over the Hoosiers. With Bus Mertes and Bill Green repeat- edly slashing through the Hoosier forward wall, the Hawkeyes marched uninterrupted to two suc- cessive touchdowns. Four times during the fourth quarter did the Bomen march down inside the Iowa 20, but each time the stiffening resistance of the Hawkeye final protective line nullified the assaults. (Top picture) Bob White (38) skirts the Wisconsin right end for a sizeable gain. (Middle) Hillenbrand is ready to catch Jacoby ' s pass just a step beyond the end zone. (Bot- tom) Jacoby scores against Wisconsin. Few times in Indiana ' s athletic history has a Crimson team fought more gloriously against great odds than did the pore little boys against the powerful Northwestern Wildcats, before bowing, 20-14, in the final minutes. The vaunted Purple eleven that had been turned back by Minnesota and mighty Notre Dame by only one point, found their only effective wea- pon against Indiana was brute force, in the form of big Don Clawson ' s bull-like charges. Their famed stars, DeCorrevont, Graham, Kepford, Bau- man, and Motl, were actually outclassed by the scrappin ' Hoosiers. Reserve power and size de- cided the issue in the fourth quarter when Claw- son battered his way 50 yards to the goal in six plays. Hillenbrand opened the scoring with a 72-yard runback of DeCorrevont ' s intercepted pass; but led by Clawson ' s fierce plunges, the ' Cats scored twice and were ahead, 14-7, at the half. The third quar- ter was all Indiana ' s as they tied the score, Hillen- brand lateraling to Jacoby on the 4-yard line for the touchdown, after a 64-yard drive. Indiana threatened again in the fourth, but Northwestern intercepted a Hillenbrand pass at midfield and drove on to win the game. (Top) Jacoby is trapped by Clawson (30) and Kepford (10) after receiving a pass at Northwestern. (Bottom) Bob White tries to get around Motl (82) and Clawson. standing up against T.C.U. JOHN TAVENER AL BRAGALONE LOU SABAN JIM TRIMBLE KENNY SMITH JACK NASH Mud-besmeared Bob White heads for open country on a smashing INDIANA 7 PURDUE Playing on a muddy field in a drizzly rain, with slips and fumbles predominant throughout the game, the fighting Hoosiers retained the Old Oaken Bucket by defeating Purdue, 7-0, in Memo- rial Stadium. Oddly enough, it was a pass that early in the fourth quarter set up the winning score. The Hoo- sier attack was bogged down on the 15-yard line. It was fourth down, two yards to go. Hillenbrand, standing straight up and without fading an inch, whipped a head-high pass down the middle to right end Ted Hasapes, who had not received a pass all year. The Purdue Special play worked and the big sophomore grabbed the ball on the 6 and plunged to the 3. Then Hillenbrand, on his second try, pierced between right guard and tackle for the touchdown. Gene White kicked the point. Captain-elect Bob White found the slippery field to his liking and accounted for seven of In- diana ' s twelve first downs. By piling up eighty- four yards in fourteen attempts, White figured as the most important cog in the I.U. offense against Purdue. Indiana was clearly the superior team in this 44th meeting of these old rivals and only four fumbles at crucial moments kept the Hoosiers from pounding at the Boilermaker goal line more fre- quently. After the first quarter in which Purdue grabbed Bob White ' s fumble to penetrate deep into Indiana territory, the Boilermakers were strictly on the defensive. The men who wound up their collegiate football careers with the Purdue game are Captain Gene White, Al Bragalone, Eddie Herbert, Charlie Steele, Walt Jurkiewicz, Kenny Moeller, Jim Trim- ble, and Kenny Smith, all of whom will be gradu- ated in May. Captain-elect Bob White tells Bo, ' Andy, and banquet-goers his next yea sports editor Brown, 236 7(4e QaileAsnaheA. Buit PURDUE (0) INDIANA (7) Rush LE Hasapes Rossi LT Trimble Melton LG Steele Johnson C Moeller Powers -RG Bragalone O ' Bryan RT.... Huff Combs RE.._ Smith Petty QB.. Herbert Smock LH.._ Hillenbrand Berto RH Jacoby Andretich FB R. White Score by quarters: Purdue — Indiana 7 — 7 Touchdown — Hillenbrand; Point after touch- down — G. White ( place kick ) . Substitutions: Purdue — Kersey, Shimer, and McCaffrey, ends; Warren, tackle; Vecs, guard; Smerke, Meakim, and Hajzyk, backs. Indiana — Zimny and lacino, tackles; G. White, guard; Ta- vener, center; Saban and Doloway, backs. Referee — Frank Lane, Cincinnati; Umpire — A. Haines, Yale; Field Judge — John Wilson, Ohio State; Head-linesman — R. H. Rupp, Chi- cago. Key-Kite. Panic; o Qiil Meeii QiaunA Rain-spattered spectators, standing three-deep around a muddy gridiron, watched the Kappa Al- pha Theta and Kappa Kappa Gamma female footballers get one touchdown apiece before darkness and the timekeeper ended the fracas in a 6-6 deadlock on November 6. With no holds barred and orthodox football actually creeping into the touch game at times, the Kappas started the scoring by completing a complicated forward routine four minutes after the start of the second half. The score came as Captain Margaret Hillis heaved a pass on the Theta 12-yard line to Marge Little, Kappa full- back, who carried it over the goal. Three minutes later the Thetas scored when Julia Ann Arthur ran back Sayles ' kick for a tally. Picking up Virginia Brown as interference, swivel- hipped Julie streaked down the sidelines 40 yards to tie the score. KAPPA THETA Sonny Schlee LE Eleanor Houghton Dede Lung LT .Betty Bohannon Charlotte Cooper C Shirley Wehmeier BoPeep McMillin RT Emily Gossbrenner Betty Wulfman RE Jerry Helvie Margaret Hillis (C) ...QB Julia Ann Arthur Doris Wilson. LH Ann Harriott Anne Sayles RH.. Pat Harris Marge Little ..FB.._ Elaine Ax (C) ■(Below) Otto Ellis preochin his feverish sermon to the multi- tude at the solemn burial of ole Jav n Purdue. (Above) A rather embarrassing shot of our captain-elect against Purdue, but later he more than amended for this fumble. V ' i SM c R O S S C O U N T R Y GluMUpJXMt ' WILT, Fredrick Loren . . . Senior . . . Pendleton, Ind. ... 5 feet 9 inches tall, 150 lbs. . . . The outstanding collegiate distance man of the year . . . National Collegiate Athletic Association individual Cross-Country champion . . . Big Ten Cross-Country champion . . . Mid-States Open champion . . . NCAA 2-mile de- fending title-holder . . . Big Ten 2-mile Indoor champ . . . And they said there ' d never be another Don Lash! Manager John Krueger and Acting Coach Mel Trutt pare notes at practice. 238 Manager Marv Sablosky boresses some of the hard-working rfDIAto U ttDIAjf jflM ' tJPWK l Seated — Rogers, Kendall, and Henry. Standing — Price, Benckart, Mitchell, and Coach Trutt. Trying to defend the championships of the Western Conference, the State, and the NCAA with only one returning letterman proved too much of a job for the inexperienced hill-and-dalers of 1941. Under the tutelage of Mel Trutt, former Indiana dis- tance star, the squad started slowly but improved with each meet. They finished with a record of two wins and two defeats in dual competition, and took runner-up honors in the Western Conference and State Meets. Trutt ' s green charges opened the season at Indiana Oct. 1 1 against Purdue. By winning, 24-32, Purdue shattered a string of Indiana victories over them which covered a fourteen-year period. Indiana ' s second loss came the following week at Champaign against Illinois, 26-30. At Lansing, Mich., on Oct. 25 the Hoosier run- ners racked up their first victory, 27-28, at the expense of a strong Michigan State aggregation. The last sched- uled dual meet was run over the Indiana course, with the Crimson emerging victorious by a 21-35 margin over Ohio State. The defense of Indiana ' s three major titles began with the State meet at Lafayette, Nov. 8. Fred Wilt, ace of the Indiana squad failed to win first place for the only time during the year. He was defeated by Captain Ed Holderman of the winning Purdue team while Indi- ana placed second with 51 points. November 17 found the Crimson harriers at Lafayette defending their Big Ten title. Purdue won with 33 points while Indiana scored 57 for runner-up honors. Fred Wilt was the individual champion, breaking the course rec- ord in 20:01 .5. Wilt became National Collegiate champion at Lans- ing, Mich., on Nov. 24, but Indiana placed ninth with 177 points, Rhode Island State winning with 83 points. CORT ROGERS HOWARD HENRY BOB BENCKART HARRY PRICE PAUL KENDALL ' pP i Wluf Me+t Gotne. 7a Callefe Since this is an all-feminine page in the very middle of the Athletic Section — strictly masculine — we felt that a few shots of the fairer sex would be appropriate in this spot. We consulted all available gag magazines, talked to some of the older boys on the campus, and finally discovered that we had to be guided by the canons of good taste ... in short, we ' re not using the stuff. However, in the search we got some good ma- terial that we will keep on permanent file for na- ture lovers, School of Business smokers, and the Bored Walk staff. Tear off the cover of this Arbutus and bring it and a hundred dollars ($100) to our office . . . we can have a party. 240 WINTER S QafUcUii. ' B A S K E T B A L L ZIMMER, Andrew Mather . . . Senior . . . Goodland, Indiana ... 6 feet, five inches tall, 1 85 lbs. . . . Captain . . . All-Conference . . . Most Valuable Player . . . failed to make numerals as a freshman . . . three seasons as a regu- lar . . . has played all positions . . . third in team scoring with 164 points this sea- son ... a defensive demon . . . rebound artist . . . Two years ago Coach Lambert of Purdue said he was too scrawny for Big Ten ball . . . Yeh? 242 Branch and stalwarts Torphy, Hoffman, Z Denton and Swanson cook up a little pre-sea trouble for foes to come. Shots like the one above made Swanson the team ' s leading point-getter. Mostly A x ud fuutck Most of the basketball fans of Indiana Univer- sity were convinced at the close of the 1940-1 941 net campaign that Branch McCracken had served his most prosperous period of hardwood master- minding at his alma mater. In his first three years of tutoring big-time University netters, Branch had produced a runner-up squad in each foray into Big Ten Conference competition. In 1940 the likable Hoosier mentor molded one of the finest aggregations of cage talent that had ever worn the crimson of our school. While forced to take the runner-up position in the Conference, they nevertheless proved their true hardwood abil- ity by annexing the national cage crown from Phog Allen ' s Kansas netmen. With most of the national champion cagemen returning for the 1940-1941 net grind, Branch again was certain of upholding his fine record in Conference and non-Conference play. Wiscon- sin was able to dent the Crimson win ledger at a crucial moment, however, and that defeat was responsible for the Indiana netters finally settling in second place in the Big Ten standings. Uphold- ing such a fine record over a period of three suc- cessive years was a big job, but Coach McCracken was the man for the task. This year the ex-Crimson star, for Branch may be singled out as one of the outstanding hard- wood artists ever to wear our colors, came through with a fine season despite the fact that he was forced to rebuild an entirely new unit around big Andy Zimmer. Having lost such seasoned cagers as Bob and Bill Menke, Curly Armstrong, Herman Schaefer, Tom Motter, Bob Dro, Chet Francis, and Jim Gridley, the Crimson tutor sought a galaxy of Hoosier sophomores and juniors to offset the absence of seasoned performers. Drawing John Logan, Ed Denton, and Irv Swan- son from the ranks of our junior men and bringing forth such fine sophomore stars as Ralph Hamilton, Dick Whittenbraker, and Warren Lewis, Big Branch was able to build another fire-wagon type of offensive around the veteran Zimmer. Again tak- ing the measure of five of six Non-Conference op- ponents and ten out of fifteen regular Conference foes, the Macmen conclusively proved that good team play and thorough coaching produce vic- tories. BRANCH McCRACKEN 243 o O Q o o Q o  i rVib 4; , , . w Top row Lewis, Alleyne, Whittenbroker, Funk, Royer, Wise, and Partenheimer. Second row — Hamilton, Gwin, Driver, Manager Morris, Logan, Wunker, and Kilby. Bottom row — Hoffman, Denton, Zimmer, Coach McCracken, Torphy, Frey, and Swanson. ffW! - ■was p H SI Ptcude 1 UUete. 2 ue Indiana ' s fire-wagon Hoosier basketeers maintained their high national position again this court campaign by coming through with another successful year of net work. Coach McCracken and his speed merchants whipped five strong non- Conference foes and ten of fifteen Conference opponents to lay claim to a second place in the Big Ten and a national ranking of sixth place among all cage teams of the nation. All-Confer- ence Captain Andy Zimmer, the only seasoned per- former around whom Mac could center his attack this year, was the dominating net character in almost every Hoosier hardwood drama of the past campaign. Senior Ev Hoffman finally came into his own after the turn of the year, with the big center looking especially impressive against Chicago and Michigan. Juniors Ed Denton and Irv Swanson were the sparkplugs of the high-geared netters; Denton, holding down the starting center post, occasioned many a cheer from the Hoosier root- ers by connecting in the crucial moments with some sensational one-handed pivot shots. Swanson, who was the popular choice as next year ' s floor leader, was responsible for giving the Hoosiers plenty of the needed drive and spirit in most of the encounters. Sophomores Hamilton, Whittenbraker, and Lewis also supplanted Junior John Logan in giv- ing the Macmen a well-balanced floor game. Ralph Hamilton, selected by the majority of the mid-west fans as the definite star of next year ' s five, had trouble in connecting on many of his favorite hook shots this season. Soph scrapper Ralph Ha board for his alma mam JOHN LOGAN ED DENTON IRV SWANSON DICK WHITTENBRAKI 244 RALPH HAMILTON BILL FREY JOHN TORPHY WARREN LEWIS NEIL FUNK The MerryMacs have met foreign foes on thirty-three occasions during the past four years and in all but two of the contests the victory-bred Crimson netters came through with victories. In 1940 a strong Southern California five, paced by the famous Ralph Vaughn of Frankfort, upset the Hoosiers, 60-59, in a tilt played at the Cali- fornians ' home bailiwick. In early December of the past campaign, a marauding band of stars from the Great Lakes Naval Training Station took the measure of our hardwood heroes by a 41-36 count. In reviewing the non-Conference play this year, it is interesting to note that the Crimson netters maintained a consistently high margin of victory in conquering all of their foreign foes. Our first opposition came from a small but powerful Wa- bash College outfit. Paced by the timely sniping of Ray Greve, the Crawfordsville cagemen gave the Hoosiers a real battle before bowing out on the short end of a 36-27 score. After the loss to Great Lakes, the Crimson speedsters re-established their somewhat stunted prestige by drubbing a supposedly championship calibre Nebraska unit, 56-29. In their last home appearance against a non- league foe, the white-clad cagers of McCracken turned back a good team from U.C.L.A. The West Coasters never got going against the Hoosiers, and were whipped by a fifteen-point margin. While on their eastern conquest of Pittsburgh and George Washington, the Big Ten runners-up were led by Junior John Logan and Sophomore Ralph Hamilton. Johnny Logan cans one against the too-talented Great Lakes aggregation. Whittenbrake sn ' t score, but you vhy! FRESHMAN SQUAD Top row — Hooper, Puree and Cowan. row — Young, Bosse, Padduck, Willi. Hines, and Coach McCreary. Bottom row — Mangin, Mistrovich, Smutzer, McG Stohler, and Farmer. inage Tcyk ROY KILBY Scooter ' ngy Wolv couple of Branch with his imsay, and Cutle Vance of lllino upset the Confere duels Logan ; champs. the Hoosiers 7I4e Bia 7e« Se.ai.an Despite the very obvious weakness in the Hoo- sier cage machine brought about by the use of sophomores in several of the starting posts, the Macmen managed to again slip onto the second rung of the Big Ten ladder. Dropping their first league tilt to a football- bred band of Wildcats at Northwestern, the Hoo- siers returned to their home court to administer a 38-34 defeat to All-Conference Johnny Kotz and his fellow Badgers from Wisconsin. The Hoo- siers again faltered at Minneapolis where they succumbed to a hard-scrapping Golden Gopher crew by a 63-43 count. The Crimson netters, far from discouraged over their poor initial efforts in Big Ten play, returned home to upset a favored Purdue quintet 40-39. On even keel once more, the MerryMacs pro- ceeded to again fall below the five hundred mark by bowing to Wisconsin, 42-36. Continuing their established policy of winning at home and losing on foreign hardwoods, the Hurrying Hoosiers drowned a mediocre Michigan five under a deluge of buckets in a 64-36 assault. Following up this win with much-needed con- quests of Chicago, Illinois, and Ohio State, the Crimson speedsters again assumed a challenging position. Two more wins accomplished over Chi- cago and Michigan boosted even to greater heights the rising stock of the Macmen. With a good opportunity of clinching exclusive possession of second place, the Hurrying Hoosiers faltered against two of their last four foes, Iowa and Northwestern, to hold a quarter share of cage stock in the runners-up post in the Confer- ence. 246 Ite Sea atuL Record I.U. Opp. 36 — Wabash 27 36 — Great Lakes 41 56 — Nebraska .29 47 — U.C.L.A 33 50 — at Pittsburgh 41 52 — at Geo. Washington 43 40 — at Northwestern 50 38 — Wisconsin 34 43 — at Minnesota 63 40 — Purdue .....39 36 — at Wisconsin 42 64 — Michigan 36 63 — at Chicago 34 46 — at Ohio State 43 41 — Illinois 36 50 — Chicago 21 47 — at Michigan 42 52 — at Iowa 55 54 — Minnesota 45 45 — Northwestern 49 48 — Ohio State 33 Second A fG wt w. Illinois 13 INDIANA 10 Iowa 10 Wisconsin 10 Purdue 9 Minnesota 9 Northwestern 5 Michigan 5 Ohio State 4 Chicago Ralph Hamilton puts the ' South Side Spin ' 1 on one, much to the despair of the Buckeyes of Ohio State. L. Pet. 2 .867 5 .667 5 .667 5 .667 6 .600 6 .600 10 .333 10 .333 11 .267 15 .000 247 w R E S T L I N G the old adage of practii OU Woe! Lady Luck turned thumbs down on Coach Billy Thorn at every available opportunity during the 1942 mat season and turned what should have been a typical Thorn team into a mere grappling apol- ogy. The 1942 record of two victories and five defeats in dual meets is not at all in keeping with Coach Thorn ' s fifteen-year total of 100 dual meet victories, 20 losses, and two draws. For the first time in a decade and a half his team failed to win a single Con- ference meet. It also marks the first time Thorn has failed to put an entire team in the Big Ten meet. He sent to Chicago only Captain Harry Traster, 165 pounds, who reached the finals and was beaten by Anthonisen of Illinois, 6-3, for the individual title, after going through the season undefeated at 175 pounds. At the beginning of the year prospects were bright for another championship aggregation; but six seasoned veterans, Joe Sparks, 128 pounds; Ben Wilson, twice 136-pound Big Ten champion; Homer Foucett, 145 pounds; Angelo Lazzerri, twice 155-pound Big Ten champion; Eddie Anderson, 175 pounds; and Jim Trimble, heavyweight, were all forced for one reason or another to give up wrestling this season. Replacing these men in two months was the job of Coach Thorn, whose teams have won seven Big Ten titles and two National Collegiate crowns, and who has developed 43 individual Conference champions, and twelve national intercol- legiate titlists. The re-made squad opened its schedule against a tough Kansas State aggregation on Jan. 26 and a victory by Traster and a draw by Archer gave the Crimson their 5 V2 points as against 24 Vi for the Jayhawks. The Crimson grapplers won two compara- tively easy meets in a row, downing Ohio University, 15-11, and Vanderbilt, 24-8. Purdue ' s Boilermakers then won their first meet over Indiana in 15 years, 20-6. Michigan, Illinois, and Ohio State easily took decisions over the Hoosiers, 25-13, 31-3, and 22-6, re- spectively. In each case Indiana was forced to forfeit three matches because of injuries and illness, and lack of replacements. Captain Harry Traster, runnerup in 165-pound division of Big Ten meet. 248 n ft n  P I f f : . . | HI |5 MKftjr j Jr m VARSITY SQUAD Bruner, Archer, Wilkinson, Traster, Ken- nelly, Hill, Frisk, Polly, and Coleman, manager. Top right — A Kansas S:aler provides an unidentified Hoosier with a cauliflower ear. Middle — Meanie Traster abuses one of his mates in the practise ring. Lower right — Where to from here? FRESHMAN SQUAD Top row — Wilson, Hungate, Golonka, and Walker. Bottom row — Tabor, Robbins, Rolak, Gumbeiner, and Risk. Varsity (left to right). Coach Royer, Savage, Pa- kucko, Klimley, Van Duren, McCooe, Elder, Franklin, and Craig. aett £teite t Coach Royer ' s tank team, cut to a seven-man squad by injuries, ineligibilities, and rather insis- tent demands by the U.S. Army, carried on under extremely difficult circumstances this year. Only three lettermen, Captain Mike Pakucko, Cecil Franklin, and Al VanDuren, and four sophomores, Dave McCooe, Lee Savage, Dick Craig, and Hank Klimley composed the undersized squad. Opening in high gear at Ball State on Jan. 10, the mermen scored a decisive victory, 62-21. A temporary injury kept Franklin from competing against Cincinnati and the Crimson lost, 42-33. Venturing into hostile territory, the tankmen were conquered by Purdue, but came back with another Freshman Ernie Vogel and ach Royer ti Mike Pakuckc rout of Ball State, on Feb. 13. Franklin broke the pool record for the 200 yard breast stroke during this meet, winning in 2:37.9. Feb. 20 the splashers were dunked by Wiscon- sin, 35-49, but the next night they drowned Ken- tucky ' s hopes by piling up a 60-23 score. The Royermen journeyed to Ohio State Feb. 27 for a 59-23 victory, but were drubbed by Illinois, 49-39, the following week end. The even season of four wins and as many defeats is far better than the past two campaigns, and is highly commendable for the skeleton squad. Four men were entered in the annual Big Ten meet at Michigan on March 14. s w I M M I N G left — Mc jnd Shimel, . ighl ■varsity Franklin, Freshman Squo man. Story, Coa and Mason .(fror La Berteaux, and row) East- nker, Tyler, sley, Vogel, I Ml h mi lit ' Ml ■■■Action aplenty by Thomas Gouchenour on the zontol bor. ,ity (left to right). Stadler, Trummer, Rufkin, ;n, Gouchenour, Sorter, Capt. Coakley, and ch Schreiber. GYMNASTICS Two captain of Nebraska et. Coakley of Indiana and Pelcak BometlUH Aetu At Old 9. 1 . This year, for the first time in its history, Indiana University has entered a gymnastics team in Big Ten competition. On September 1, 1941, the Nor- mal College of the American Gymnastic Union be- came Indiana ' s ninth and newest college. Founded in 1866, the N. C. A. G. U. is the oldest institu- tion for the training of teachers of physical educa- tion in America. Since 1932, I. U. has cooperated with this organization by allowing their students to come to the Indiana University campus for the final year of their four-year course. Under the new arrangement, graduates will re- ceive a degree of B.S. in physical education after having spent two years at the Indianapolis school and completed the four-year term on the Bloom- ington campus. All alumni of the Normal school automatically become alumni of Indiana University, and if they desire may receive a diploma with the B.S. degree and a major in health and physical education. The tumblers, in their first encounter, smashed Nebraska, 326-176, on Feb. 9. Five days later Southern Illinois Normal eked out a close win, 421 ' 2 -404 Vi . Competing in a strenuous two-day stretch, Indiana lost to Chicago, 376.3-615.2, on Feb. 20, and to Illinois a day later, 536.9-578.7. In the triangular meet with Chicago and Iowa at Iowa City, the Hoosiers chalked up a close second, trailing Chicago, 566.7-592.1. Faced by more experienced and stronger com- petition in the Big Ten championships at Minne- apolis on March 14th, Indiana was outpaced by Illinois, Minnesota, and Chicago, but showed quite creditably by winning fourth place. 251 One of the Hoosiers ' mid-winter athletic attrac- tions was the series of programs between halves of the basketball games. (Upper left) The N.C.A. G.U. ' s did their part with exhibitions of gymnastic feats. . . (Upper right) February found Pooch Harrell, Tim Temerario, Bo McMillin, Swede Anderson, and Branch McCracken of the athletic staff bidding goodbye to ex-cohort Ralph Graham, who left Indiana upon accepting the post of Athletic Director at Kansas State. . . Not a regularly scheduled swimming meet, but more of a tradition each year is the Dolphin Follies, which combines the beauty of swimmin ' with the beauty of women. . . (Lower right) Two Jeans of Pi Beta Phi, McKee and Holland, exchange smiles before taking their next shots at those far-away pins during physical ed. 252 s s G B A S E B A L L 2 a W DUNKER, Don. . . Senior. . . Seymour, Ind. . . 6 feet 2 inches tall, 195 lbs. . . pitcher deluxe. . . Following is his 1941 season record: . . . Voted Most Valuable Player in Big Ten by Conference coaches. . . Won 6 games, lost 1. . . Most strikeouts in Big Ten, 44. . . Best earned-run average in Big Ten, 1 .66 per game. . . Offensive threat, too; batted .304. . . He ' s A-1 in the hearts of I.U. fans. . . But, alas, he ' s 1-A in the army and probably won ' t get to complete the 1942 season! Charley Shumaker, leading Crimson hitter, scores first Conference run of the 1941 season against 254 Vorsily (left to right) . Top row — Managers Nelson and Peters. 2nd row — Cropp, Wade, Bothwell, Brown, Hillen- brand, Cronin, and Sarengach. 3rd row — Wible, Hamilton, Spence, Cogan, Wahl, Kilby, Wise, and White. 4th row — Vittoz, Crites, Coonan, Watkins, Smith, Hoffman, Groh, and Coach Harrell. Bottom row — Dunker, Gordon, Boehm, Pavis, Shu- maker, Bruner, Wellman, and Cooper. ut fyan, 7 e Alnttf . . . Although the army refused to play ball and grabbed off Don Dunker, Indiana ' s ace pitcher, before the start of the baseball season, Coach Paul (Pooch) Harrell had nine returning lettermen and a goodly number of rookies with which to begin the year ' s diamond campaign. His goal was to better last year ' s good record of 16 wins and six losses. There were heated arguments for all but two positions on the team. Charlie Shumaker, who hit .354 last season, was considered a fixture in right field; and Guy Wellman returned to take over the catching assignment. In addition to Shumaker and Wellman, Dale Boehm, Clarence Bruner, Ralph Cooper, Everett Hoffman, John Logan, Bob Pavis, and Bob Vittoz had won letters last year and returned to the diamond in Jordan Field this spring. At initial practice sessions and even up to the first game, Coach Harrell wasn ' t sure of the varsity combination he would use. Promising rookies and returning second string- ers were Crites, Smith, Cronin, Coonan, Brown, Hamilton, Wahl, Gordon, Kilby, Hillenbrand, White, Wade, Bothwell, Sarengath, Wible, Cogan, Groh, Watkins, Spence, Cole- man, and Wise. Home plate will be dusted off 25 times during an active season for the Crimson diamondmen, who will play 14 home contests and 13 road games. Here is the schedule: March 26, Franklin; March 27 and 28, DePauw; April 1, Wabash; April 2, 3, and 4, St. Joseph; April 6, Indiana State; April 7, Franklin; April 10 and 11, Illinois; April 13, Indiana State; April 17 and 18, Iowa; April 21, Butler; April 24 and 25, Ohio State; April 28, Wabash; May 1 and 2, Michigan; May 8 and 9, Purdue; May 12, Butler; and May 15 and 16, Minnesota. PAUL (POOCH) HARRELL 255 JL__LL!__:nMCH ...... J . ■■V 1 JffMn 4fy vt Uir DlAfo Varsity (left to righ Top rov — Kane, Le 2nd rov v — Riley, Fa 3rd rov , — Jones, N 4th rov. — Price, Pri Bottom row — Mite Chelton , and Henry. nd B. Jones, and Johnson. McAdams, Jacoby, and Saban. kett, Mills, and Steels, lell, Kendall, Coach Haye: Qo-ad — 0 t SfSboil With the loss by graduation and ineligibility of several of the stars who helped dethrone Michigan in 1941 and break the Wolverines ' seven-year grip on the Indoor Conference meet, the Hoosiers found they didn ' t have the man-power to success- fully defend their coveted crown. Among the missing from last year ' s crack squad are big Archie Harris, Roy Cochran, Fred Wilt, Ed Mikulas, Wayne Tolliver, Bob Burnett, Vernon Broert]es, and Marc Jenkins, leaving only veteran Campbell Kane to carry the brunt of the defense. The incomparable Kane did his share in the Indoor Conference meet, held at Chicago on March 6 and 7, by successfully defending his mile and ' 2-mile championships in 4:14 and 1:56.2 respec- tively. Earl Mitchell, Indiana sophomore, annexed the 2-mile crown in 9:30, but Ohio State took the Meet title with 38 points. Illinois ' 28 points was good for second place, while Indiana totaled 27 points for third. The two scheduled indoor dual meets showed that, though Indiana had its share of individual stars, the Hoosiers lacked a well-balanced squad, and subsequently both meets were lost. Illinois trounced the Crimson in the season opener, 76-28, and Purdue followed up the next week with a 53 Vi -50 Vs decision over the Hayesmen. Indiana scored seven firsts to Purdue ' s five, but couldn ' t muster the power to capture the important second and third places. Indiana, however, outscored Pur- due 27-10 in the Conference meet. The ever-powerful Crimson middle-distance men turned in two relay victories at the Butler Relays to take third place behind Notre Dame (331 2 points) and Ohio State (27 points). Paul Kendall, Harry Price, and Earl Mitchell gave Campbell Kane a slight lead in the 2-mile relay and he went on to outlast Bob Ufer of Michigan in 7:45.1. The same combination scored first in the Medley relay in 10:17.3. Johnson added Indiana ' s 21st point with a tie for third in the high jump. Coach Hayes and cohorts. (Standing) Combs, Wol- ford, and Briggs. (Kneeling) Krueger and Sa- blosky. 256 T R A C K ' Bfieed M uUta d ' KANE, Campbell Gelino . . . Senior . . . Valparaiso, Ind. ... 6 feet 3 inches tall . . . 190 lbs. . . . National Collegiate Vi-mile Champion, 1940, 1941 ... Big Ten Indoor Mile Champion, 1940, 1941, 1942 . . . Big Ten Outdoor Mile Cham- pion, 1940, 1941 ... Big Ten Indoor Vi -mile Champion, 1942 . . . Big Ten Out- door Vi-mile record holder, 1:51.3 . . . Fastest V 2 -mile, 1:50 at Princeton, 1940 . . . Fastest mile, 4:11, Chicago relays, 1941 . . . 1942 Outdoor season yet to come . . . What ' a guy! 257 jdookiruf J tead As the 1942 Arbutus goes to press, the Outdoor track outlook is much the same as that of the Indoor season prospects two months ago. The field events, sprints, and hurdles of the Outdoor season will be of little added value to the Hoosiers, whose main strength lies with their middle- distance runners. Lack of a balanced squad will probably spell disappointment to the Crimson in their attempts to defend the crowns won by last year ' s strong aggregation. The scheduled meets for the 1942 season in which In- diana will participate include: April 24 and 25, Penn Re- lays; May 2, Ohio State, here; May 9, Pittsburgh, there; May 15 and 16, Big Ten Outdoor Meet at Northwestern; May 23, State Meet at Purdue; June 6, Central Collegiate Meet at Milwaukee; June 16, Big Ten-Pacific Coast Meet; and June 20, National Collegiate Meet. In the Big Ten Out- door and the Central Collegiate Meets the Hoosiers will play the role of defending champions by virtue of last year ' s victories. Archie Harris and Campbell Kane shared the spotlight in the 1941 Big Ten Outdoor Meet, each taking two firsts and breaking a Conference record. Harris tossed the discus 174 feet, 1 inch for a new Big Ten and American record and won the shot put with a 50-foot heave. Kane took the half mile in the record-breaking time of 1:51.3 forty minutes after retaining his one-mile crown. Notre Dame piled up a sufficient number of seconds and thirds to win the State Intercollegiate Meet over Indiana, 68 Vi -60 V4 , but the Hayesmen came back the next week to outscore the Irish, 42-28 V2 , and take the Central Col- legiates at Milwaukee on June 6. Upper left: Freshman track squad Top row — Midkiff, Lett, C. Smith, Mathews. Second row — Wilkinson, Herber, R. Smith, Myers, Roach, McClure. Third row — Chalmer, Davis, Harrison, Mason, Kruyer, Boruff. Bottom row — Odell, Glasser, Bocknicka, Tolbert, Judge, Kel- sey. Lower left: Some nasty old Boilermaker wins the 60-yard high hurdles. Upper right: Johnson clears 6 feet to take first in the Purdue meet. Lower right: Sprinter Larry Falwell listens to words of wisdom from Coach Hayes. 258 G O L F Pre-season plans in Boden. (Seated) Ande ger, and Coach Soutar naking. (Standing) Aldrich and Ramsay, Athletic Director Cleven- State amateur champ Timbrook gets a few pointers fron Prof. Hugh E. Willis in the Fieldhouse practice cage. Mote Wae. Only the return to school of Henry Timbrook, Jr., State Amateur champion, casts a ray of hope on the otherwise bleak outlook of the 1942 golf season. Until Timbrook turned up for another year of collegiate competition, Coach James Soutar faced the prospects of sending a team entirely depleted of experienced golfers against ten of the crack squads of the middle-west. Except for Timbrook who played the No. 1 po- sition for two years, only two of the genial Scots- man ' s prospects have played in a varsity match. Bob Boden was No. 6 man, or first alternate last year, and Wendall Aldrich was a letter winner two years ago. Lost from last year ' s squad via graduation or the army are the entire starting lineup, Wilbur VanHorn, Frank Penning, Hal Schmidt, Bill Horton, and Steve Rose, and also relief men, Bob Sill and Pete Corallo. The 1941 team won three and lost four of its regularly scheduled dual meets and placed fourth in the annual Big Ten Tournament. Northwestern, Detroit, and Purdue were the Hoosiers ' victims, while the Crimson dropped decisions to Ohio State, Michigan, Butler, and Illinois. The 1942 schedule is as follows: April 18 Northwestern at Indianapolis 25 Detroit at Bloomington 27 Illinois at Champaign May 2 Ohio State at Bloomington 4 Michigan at Indianapolis 9 Purdue at Lafayette 18-19 Big Ten Meet at Ann Arbor, Mich. 25 Indiana State Meet at Notre Dame 259 T E N N I S Coach Ralph Collins and several early-season varsity aspir- ants. Back row — Coach Collins, Weber, Inman, and Whit- tenbraker. Front Row — Isaac, Wolf, and Reed. 7 4 i foe Jloakiruf fyfi The not-too-impressive record of three victories against nine defeats that the 1941 team left was nevertheless the best showing of Crimson netters in the last four years and gives rise to hopes for continuously better seasons in the next few years. Handicapped for years by lack of adequate training facilities, or more simply, tennis courts, the Hoosiers are now in a position to mold into smoother teams because of the new men ' s courts on East Third street. Coach Ralph Collins of the English Department, who wielded a mean racket for Sewanee University in the deep South about a decade ago, has just three returning lettermen to serve as a nucleus for his 1942 squad. Jim Wood, who had the best match record last year, Jack Feighner, and Fred Wolf are the available monogram -wearers. During the 1941 season the netters took de- cisions from Butler, Wabash, and Detroit, and were on the wrong end of the score in tilts with Wayne University, DePauw, Cincinnati, Illinois, Notre Dame, Western State Teachers College, Ken- yon, Purdue, and Ohio State. Three of these de- feats were by a single point, showing that if the Hoosiers had had another good doubles combina- tion they would have broken even in meet wins and losses. The 1942 card is composed of meets with Cin- cinnati, there, April 18; Ball State, here, April 24; Illinois, there, April 25; Notre Dame, there, April 30; Western State Teachers College, there, May 1 ; Michigan State, there, May 2; Big Ten at Ohio State, May 14, 15, and 16; DePauw, there, May 18; Miami University, there. May 23. No. 1 man Jim Wood and Coach Collins ponder the effect on the supply of tennis balls. 260 I N T R A M U R A L S Immodest intr. Above Intramural managers (left to r Ight): Dave Reeve John McFaddin, Prof. Schla er, di ecto , Free Morr s. Her Cramer and Charles Feeger. Below — Betas tangle with Aca cias in the touch footba 1 final Jlasid It o keAA. The tremendous task of keeping the In- diana University Intramural program run- ning smoothly requires a great deal of administrative work. George Schlafer, di- rector of the activity, is assisted in his duties each year by a group of managers. The managers for the 1941-42 Intra- mural program are Dave Reeves and John McFaddin, sophomores; Fred Morris and Herb Cramer, juniors; and Charles Feeger, senior. Each manager takes on more re- sponsibility as he advances in years of service. 261 Ike And A uu The upshot of a loosely organized system of athletic events between various organizations is the present intramural program. Prior to 1919 the only thing resembling intramurals at Indiana Uni- versity was a few widely assorted contests be- tween those groups who arranged contests at various times. With the transfer of George Schlafer from the Extension Division in 1919 came the intramural renaissance. Planning, guidance, and encourage- ment by Schlafer and his staff built the intramural system to what it is today. Starting with the annual cross-country run in early fall, the intramural ath- letic program is climaxed in the spring by the Open House. In this event the final contests of the intramural program for the year are held and the championships decided. Between the cross-country run and the open house are held eight months of top-notch competition in Fall and Spring golf, swimming. Fall and Spring codeball, touch foot- ball, major and minor volleyball, ping-pong sin- gles and doubles, aerial dart singles and doubles, handball singles and doubles, major and minor basketball, indoor and outdoor track and field, Softball, tennis singles and doubles, horseshoe pitching, and weightlifting. Thus Indiana University ' s intramural system has grown until it comprises teams from 75 organiza- tions, each with a manager and a well-planned system of its own. George E. Schlafer, Intramural director Intramural Organization managers {left to right) : Top row — Windmiller, Haugh, Rock, Morgan, Regenfuss, An- derson, Hilgman. Second row — Reeves, Johnson, Thornton, Wiemer, Carter, Martin. Third row — Ferrari, Bingham, Izsak, Schuchman, Statler, Riegham, Singleton. Fourth row — Beck, Richder, Angel, Volpert, Clifford, Neuman. Fifth row — Sutter, Pfaff, Reed, Harrer, McMahon, Copp. Bottom row — Shumaker, Hubbard, Dolen, Deal, Joyce. e 9 t+teA, WotJziftXfl No, he didn ' t knock it off. The purpose of the intramural program is to afford opportunity to all men to participate whole- somely, on a competitive basis, and without fee, in some physical activity of their own choice. Much of the credit for the showing of any or- ganization in the All-Intramural standings must be given to the manager of that team. For a team to have a successful season, the manager must be continually on the job to see that no matches are forfeited. Points are deducted for each forfeit, and only one or two forfeits may eliminate a team from any chance of winning the All-Intramural championship for that year. The All-Intramural championship is determined by awarding points for the various activities en- tered. The number of points scored in each activity is dependent upon the showing of the organiza- tion in that particular activity. The winner of the 1940-41 championship was Delta Tau Delta with 1 066 Vi points. Sigma Chi and Beta Theta Pi placed second and third with 1062 and 1052 points respectively. As the 1942 Intramural season swung into the final spring campaign the leaders were Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Acacia, and Phi Gamma Delta in that order. Roughly speaking, all men enrolled in the Uni- versity are eligible for Intramural competition, but exceptions apply to men who have received I ' s in varsity competition. Certain other restrictions also apply to numeral winners and varsity squad members who have not received I ' s. Fraternity teams are limited to members of the particular fraternity, while Independent teams are limited to a certain number of men per sport. hysteria with lots of action. Intramural touch football in full swing. Mote 0£ ' Ike. Same The Indiana University Intramural point system differs from many other systems in that it places emphasis on participation rather than on winning championships. The entry points at Indiana University are the same for all sports, namely 50 points. The cham- pionships in all sports are awarded 5 points and the next four ranking positions receive 4, 3, 2, and 1 point respectively. Usually there is not a great difference in the point total of teams that com- pete regularly. More teams are thus kept in the running, and oftentimes the all-Intramural cham- pionship is decided in the final events during the annual Open House. With the University speed-up program came required Physical Education for all men over 20 years of age. At first it was thought that the Uni- versity Intramural program would suffer. Why should the average male student want to partici- pate actively in intramurals when he was getting 5 hours or more per week of strenuous physical activity? That was the theory advanced. However, a full semester of required Physical Education has seen no decrease in Intramural participation. Pro- fessor Schlafer, in charge of intramurals, advanced the theory that the heavy use of freshmen in intra- murals by the fraternities has been one factor in preventing the expected decline. This together with the fact that the Intramural program offers genu- ine enjoyment to its participants has apparently prevented the previously expected lag. Bob Smith leads Bill Wilken in a gruelling 3-lap race. Roge watches the bird afte jnding smacl First down! Goal to gc First down! Goal to gc Below is listed the rank of the top ten organiza- tions, together with their total points, average points, and average rank since the 1929-30 schoof year. Organization Beta Theta Pi Sigma Alpha Mu Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Chi Phi Delta Theta Phi Kappa Psi Phi Gamma Delta Phi Beta Delta Alpha Tau Omega Delta Upsilon Total points 8567.4 8074.4 8012.7 7918.8 7895.1 7861.5 7619.9 7613.4 7605 7331.5 Of these 10 organizations, only five have ac- tually won first place. Phi Delta Theta and Sigma Alpha Epsilon have each won the university cham- pionship twice, while Phi Kappa Psi, Beta Theta Pi, and Sigma Chi have annexed the crown once over a twelve-year period. Ave. Ave. points rank 713.9 1 672.9 2 667.7 3 659.9 4 657.8 5 655.1 6 634.9 7 634.4 8 633.7 9 611 10 Intramural track and field: Looks like a winning tos 265 Prof. Edna Munr . head of Physical Educati. for two of her students. WU Said WeakeA, Be , ? The University ' s speed-up program has also affected women ' s athletics! The women on the campus will be tak- ing physical education for four years now although the juniors and seniors will be given their choice of First Aid, Home-Nursing, Nutrition or Safety. The activities, too, are offered by semesters now instead of dividing the term ' s work into two seasons. Faculty members in the Department of Physical Education are Prof. Edna Munro, head of the department, Miss Clara Fedler, Miss Jane Fox, Miss Helen Yeakel, Miss Margaret Brewster, Miss Eloise Chumley, and Miss Marjorie Phillips. The majors in physical education have organized the Physical Education Club for Women of which Miss Chum- ley is the sponsor. The purpose of this organization is to promote professional growth and perspective, give unity to the professional group, supply united support for worthy projects, and promote the best interest in physical educa- tion. Think what they could dc P H Y S I C A L E D U C A T I O N FOR WOMEN Upper led: The most populo Lower left: Aerial darts in Upper right: Perfect form! Lower right: The old swimr jmen ' s sport. Student Building. 2) id 1j U4, Khxuu? In the intramural tournaments this year Agnes Turman won in golf. The Delta Gamma team of Martha Rupel, Jean Clements, Shirley Ploner, Ruth Walter, Virginia Boughan, Marian Griffin, Barbara Meek, and Mary Ann Samms, won the swimming meets in which eleven teams took part. Thirty-two teams played volleyball during the season; District Two won, defeating the Kappas, 30-19, in the final game. A bowling tournament was given for the first time this year. Twenty-two teams, having four mem- bers on each team, competed in leagues this season. Table tennis, badminton, and basketball teams also competed. Due to the speed-up program however, there was no spring tournament. Women ' s athletics, in accordance with the new univer- sity plan, have now been divided into three semesters. The department plans to include hockey, speedball, volley- ball, Softball, tennis, golf, swimming, horseback riding, archery, and modern dance as the selections for the Sep- tember semester. Students enrolled in the January semester will be able to choose from basketball, volleyball, bad- minton, swimming, bowling, special posture work, group games and exercises, tap dancing, folk dancing, and mod- ern dancing as their winter sport. A selection of activities which have been offered during the other two semesters with an emphasis on the outdoor program will be offered during the third semester. The latter semester, however, will be divided into two seasons. 267 • • Ai. We. Study ana. Jleasut Mi. Mte. UNIVERSITY Dr. Bryan delivers his traditional inspiring address to the freshmen of the class of 1945. Nothing like standing in line we always say, but then it ' s a good way to get acquainted with people. The inquiring student steps in to see Julian S. Bryan foi little advice on the matter — any matter will do. For a good case of writer ' s cramp, although several page nd signatures less than last year, try registering. academic black and the formal freshman clas an the steps of the Student Building. 270 Julian Scott Bryan, student guidance director, tells student just exactly what to do. And so we continue to drink coffe our favorite professor. rid smile sweetly at Quit shoving! Isn ' t that line moving any? I gotta get out of here, gotta a date with a smooth gal at three — BfW ttwoa TODAY B for band, and an excellent way to get into football and basketball games for nothing. 271 A new institution at the University is the Wednesday afternoon Coffee Hour — a terrific way to polish the apple. JUeu Qiudl INDIANA UNIVERSITY BLOOMINGTON Office of the President To the Seniors of 1942 t You constitute the first class to be graduated from Indiana University during World War II. T7hen you entered the University the world for the most part was at peace. You go out from the University into a world at war. The training you have received in the University has been on the whole for the careers of peace. However, this training will fit you for the responsibilities that come in days of war. In war or peace I know that you will carry on, maintaining the traditions which ever have characterized the men and women of Indiana University. The University will continue to be interested in your welfare. And you, it is hoped, will always be interested in the welfare of the University. As alumni you still will be an integral part of the University. It is the I. U. tradition that you keep in touch with the University, join actively in alumni affairs, and come back as often as you can to the campus. Here you always will find a welcome. Here you will find friends. Here you will find encouragement for the success which the University hopes will come to you. Cordially yours, rf u juuL. E. B Wells President mt 272 the fyniuesUitu Ora L. Wildermuth LL.B. ' 06 President Paul L. Feltus ' 21 William A. Kunkel A.B. ' 16 J. Dwight Peterson A.B. ' 19 John S. Hastings LL.B. ' 24 Mrs. Sanford Teter A.B. ' 93 Uz McMurtrie A.B. ' 08 Frank E. Allen A.B. ' 16, A.M. ' 24 Thomas A. Cookson ' 06 Treasurer Ward G. Biddle A.B. ' 16 Secretary M- imG t li Welti Therefore, I bespeak serious consideration of the Indiana University War Service Plan — a program of the University during the war and, at least in certain of its features, for the peace that follows. This statement by President Wells in his introduction to the University ' s War Service Bulletin is one which exemplifies a large portion of his work during the current school year. Untiringly, the youthful administrator worked to bring about a plan which would effectively meet the demands of a student body confronted by numerous problems in a world at war. With his finger truly on the pulse of Indi- ana University, President Wells never fails to help the students meet and solve difficulties facing them. 274 Not only did December 7, 1941, bring about the bombing of Pearl Harbor, but it marked also the beginning of a continued bombard- ment of war bulletins, letters, and worried stu- dents facing enlistment into the office of the Dean of the Faculties — Herman T. Briscoe. Dean Briscoe has met the demands of the bombardment with the same calmness and com- placency with which he meets and solves all problems. Always the friend of the students, Dr. Briscoe has been of great assistance in helping them settle war-created difficulties. Wasid Q. ilddle The power of the purse is a mighty one, but at Indiana University it is handled capably by a man who has served the University faithfully in various positions for nineteen years. Now an efficient comptroller, Mr. Biddle first was manager of the Indiana University Book- store and then director of the Indiana Memorial Union. At the present time, in addition to his numerous duties as comptroller, Mr. Biddle serves as the executive secretary for the Board of Trustees. During his years here he has led in many of the University ' s progressive measures. 275 2 ean a I w . 04fte4t The supervision of activities and programs necessary to train the coeds of Indiana Uni- versity to become efficient leaders both in the community and in the home is the task con- fronting Dean Mueller and her assistant, Mrs. Kirby. Active parts in the University ' s curricular war program were played by both women, who also assisted, as well as guided, various campus organizations eager to do their part for national preparedness. DEAN KATE H. MUELLER MRS. LOTTIE KIRBY ROBERT BATES 2 east a {Mi est Dean Edmondson was assisted this year in his work of guiding Indiana ' s male students by a young new-comer to the University campus — Dean Bates. Although Dean Bates may not have played an especially important role in helping Dean Edmondson uphold his nation- wide fame at the billiard table, he certainly did his share in handling the male activities and in helping settle the problems of rods and rods-to-be. DEAN C. E. EDMONDSON 276 School al -Anti ana Science. PoorS ' Poors School ol HuHfie i School ol Crducatian School ajj JlawL =£ fE EE E E S E? -r—r-t School a MmAac (Seated, left to right) Karl Rahdert, treasurer,- Margaret Fargo, secretary; Madelyn Pugh, chair- man, Senior Memorial Committee; Mary Rees, vice-president; Fred Case, chairman, Invitations Com- mittee. (Standing, left to right) Ernest Jones, chairman, Peace-Pipe Committee; John Krueger, chairman, Siwash Committee; Don Davis, chairman, Tree-Planting Committee; Bob Gates, president. SeHtiViA, This year ' s senior class, although hampered by persistent draft boards, has nevertheless turned out its quota of rods and roddesses, and has been looked at in awe by its share of underclass- men. The class of ' 42, in conformity with traditions set by other senior classes, has griped outwardly at the expense, but inwardly has thrilled at the excitement of ordering invitations, paying for caps and gowns, and putting cash on the line for a diploma — the tangible result of a college career. With the distinction of being the first class to be graduated from the University after the United States entered World War II, these seniors have carried much of the responsibility for initiating and administering the changes at Indiana University that have come as a result of wartime demands. Under the time-honored merit system, Bob Gates was selected president of this year ' s class. As- sisting him were Mary Rees, vice-president; Margaret Fargo, secretary; and Karl Rahdert, treasurer. From among the top ranking seniors are chosen also the six committees to plan the traditional senior functions. Their work includes planning the Siwash, senior breakfast, memorial, invitations, and the tree-planting and peace-pipe ceremonies. The ten seniors ranking highest for activity and grade points in the class of 1942 were Bob Gates, Mary Rees, Margaret Fargo, John Krueger, Jo Anne Pierpont, Hester Graham, Lois Arm- strong, Maurice Kirkwood, Ed Bartley, and Fred Case. 283 First Row ROGER JACKSON ABOUSAMRA, Muncie . . B.S. Business . . Y.M.C.A.; Alpha Kappa Psi . . . . GEORGE P. ADAMS, Jr., Rush- ville . . A.B. Sociology .... RUTH M. ADAMS, Cincinnati, Ohio . . B.S. Education . . Oceanides; Physical Education Club for Women; W.A.A ROBERT J. ADDISON, Gary . . A.B. Government . . President, International Relations Club; Pi Sigma Alpha; Flame Club. Second Row GEORGE H. AHLERING, Indianapolis . . A.B. Chemistry .... ENID MARION ALBERTSON, Milton . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A. .... WENDELL R. ALDRICH, Angola . . A.B. Chemistry . . Delta Tau Delta; Varsity Golf .... LEONARD ALFORD, Garrett . . B.S. Education. Third Row WILLOUGHBY ALLEN, Washington . . B.S. Business . . Pi Beta Phi; Y.W.C.A.; Home Economics Club; Coed Counsellor; Board of Directors, Collegiate Chamber of Commerce; Vice-President, Omicron Delta . . . . F. LAURENCE ANDERSON, Jr., Gary . . LL.B. . . Law Club; Kappa Alpha Psi ... . MURIEL ANDERSON, Indianapolis . . B.S. Education . . Pi Beta Phi; Y.W.C.A JAMES ANTRIM, Chicago, Illinois . . B.S. Business . . Secretary, Theta Chi; President, Council of Fraternity Presidents .... ALICE VIR- GINIA APPLEGATE, Winamac . . A.B. English . . I.S.A.; Y.W.C.A.; University Theatre .... LOU ALICE ARBOGAST, Indian- apolis . . A.B. Psychology .... MILTON ARCHER, Terre Haute . . B.P.S.M. Instrumental Emphasis . . Delta Chi; Marching Hun- dred; Men ' s Glee Club; Inter-Fraternity Council .... JOANNA ARCHIBALD, New Castle . . B.S. Business . . Treasurer, Chi Gamma; Omicron Delta; 1940 Arbutus Staff. Fourth Row WILLIAM H. ARMBRUSTER, Seymour . . A.B. Chemistry . . President, Sigma Nu . . . . LOIS ARMSTRONG, Springville . . A.B. Home Economics . . . Mortar Board; President, Y.W.C.A.; Pleiades; Omicron Nu; Alpha Lambda Delta; Home Economics Club; Der Deutsche Verein; Chi Gamma; Senior Siwash Committee .... MARY JANE ARMSTRONG, Bedford . . B.S. Medical Tech- nology . . Alpha Omicron Pi; Y.W.C.A.; Alpha Lambda Delta; A.W.S. Council; W.A.A.; President, Pan-Hellenic Council .... KATHERINE DURHAM ARNOLD, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . Treasurer, Delta Gamma; Oceanides; Y.W.C.A. Council .... ROBERT WALTER ARNOLD, Michigan City . . B.S. Business . . Delta Tau Delta; Senior Football Manager; Skull and Crescent; Y.M.C.A JAMES BYRON AUKERMAN, Peru . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; Beta Gamma Sigma; Phi Eta Sigma; Wesley Foundation; Sigma Epsilon Theta; Flame Club; Accounting Club; Alpha Kappa Psi; University Symphony Orchestra; Y.M.C. A BETTY JANE AUNGST, Kendallville . . B.S. Education . . President, Euclidean Circle; Vice-President, Junior Math Club; Education Club; F.T.A.; Kappa Phi; Y.W.C.A.; Coed Counsellor .... ROBERT LEE AUSTIN, Anderson . . J.D. . . Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Phi Delta Phi. Fifth Row ALLAN AUTREY, Rochester . . B.S. Chemistry .... LEONILA BADGER, Washington, D.C. . . A.B. Spanish . . Secretary, I.S.A.; Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; Der Deutsche Verein; Protestant Student Council; Student Religious Cabinet; English Club; Spanish Club; Coed Counsellor; Senior Tree-Planting Committee; Alpha Lambda Delta .... ALBERT L. BAILEY, Anderson . . B.S. Business . . Phi Kappa Psi; Jordan River Revue .... GARY BAILEY, South Bend . . A.B. English .... KATHRYN BAKER, Bloomington . . A.B. Home Economics . . Omicron Nu; Alpha Lambda Delta; Home Economics Club .... GARZA BALDWIN, Jr., Vincennes . . B.S. Business . . Treasurer, Kappa Sigma; Sphinx Club; Junior Baseball Manager; 1940 Arbutus Staff .... JOHN J. BALDWIN, Crown Point . . B.S. Business . . Delta Chi; Alpha Phi Omega; Insurance Club; Management Club; Accounting Club; Marching Hundred; Wrestling Manager; Inter-Fraternity Council .... ROBERT ASHTON BALDWIN, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . Marching Hundred; Freshman Track; Alpha Kappa Psi; Accounting Club. Sixth Row MARTHA ELLEN BALES, Shelbyville . . B.S. Business . . Wesley Foundation Council; Kappa Phi; Vice-President, F.T.A.; Educa- tion Club; Omicron Delta; Y.W.C.A NORMA J. BALLARD, French Lick . . A.B. Spanish . . Kappa Kappa Gamma; Y.W. C.A.; History Club .... CHARLES BARAN, Gary . . B.S. Medicine . . Nu Sigma Nu . . . . CHARLES J. BARNHILL, Bloomington . . LL.B. . . Phi Delta Theta; Student Editor, Indiana Law Journal; Treasurer, Phi Delta Phi ... . DOOVID BARSKIN, Martins- ville . . B.P.S.M. Music . . Sigma Alpha Mu ; Theta Alpha Phi; Jordan River Revue .... ED BARTLEY, Bloomington . . B.S. Business . . President, Phi Gamma Delta; Union Board; Board of Aeons; Sphinx Club; Vice-President, Collegiate Chamber of Commerce; Delta Sigma Pi; Beta Gamma Sigma; Crimson Stags; Senior Siwash Committee .... JEANICE BARTLING, Ft. Wayne . . A.B. Spanish . . Alpha Omicron Pi; Y.W.C.A.; Republican Club; Spanish Club .... JAMES W. BATCHELOR, Mar- ion . . A.B. Geology . . Board of Directors, I.S.A.; Treasurer, Y.M.C.A. Cabinet; Men ' s Glee Club; English Club; Protestant Student Council. 284 WILLOUGHBY ALLEN F. LAURENCE ANDERSON MURIEL ANDERSON JAMES ANTRIM ALICE VIRGINIA APPLEGATE LOU ALICE ARBOGAST MILTON ARCHER JOANNA ARCHIBALD WILLIAM H. ARMBRUSTER LOIS MARY JANE ARMSTRONG ARMSTRONG KATHERINE ROBERT WALTER JAMES BYRON BETTY JANE ROBERT LEE ARNOLD ARNOLD AUKERMAN AUNGST AUSTIN MARTHA ELLEN BALES JEANICE JAMES W. BARTLING BATCHELOR 285 MARJORIE BLANCHE A. BRUCE BENWARD LUCY MARIAN BENNINGHOFF BENTON BERKEY RUTH BERMAN JEAN BERNARD MORRIS BEST ROBERT BETHEA 0 DOROTHY J. ELMER BILLINGS DAVID BLACK ROBERT GERALD BILLINGS BLACKBURN MARY BLACKMORE First Row SAMUEL L. BLUE, Mentone . . A.B. Government . . Marching Hundred; Law Club .... THEODORE E. BOCKSTAHLER, Bloom- ington . . A.B. Chemistry . . Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Phi Eta Sigma; Jordan River Revue; Folio Staff; Der Deutsche Verein; Le Cercle Francois; Men ' s Glee Club; Choral Union; Sigma Epsilon Theta; Y.M.C.A. Cabinet; Alpha Chi Sigma .... HERMAN HENRY BOCKSTEGE, Jr., Evansville . . B.S. Business . . Accounting Club; Pistol Club .... JOHN W. BOEHNE, Evansville . . B.S. Chemistry . . Phi Gamma Delta; President, Alpha Chi Sigma; American Chemical So- ciety .... FELIX BOGART, Brooklyn, New York . . A.B. History . . Pi Lambda Phi; Secretary, Sigma Delta Chi; Indiana Daily Student Staff; History Club; Bored Walk Staff . . . DALE H. BOGGY, Indianapolis . . A.B. History . . Spanish Club; History Club; Le Cercle Francois .... BETTY BOHANNON, Terre Haute . . A.B. English . . Kappa Alpha Theta; Theta Alpha Phi; Y.W.C.A.; Stage Door ; Our Town ; Tonight at 8:30 ; What a Life .... MARGARET ANN BOHNERT, Jasper . . B.S. Education . . Delta Delta Delta; Newman Club. Second Row BETTY BONATH, Hobart . . A.B. Sociology . . Treasurer, Alpha Omicron Pi; W.A.A.; President, Tennis Club; Newman Club .... ANGELO BONAVENTURA, East Chicago . . B.S. Medicine . . Phi Beta Pi; Newman Club .... AUDREY BOND, Ham- mond . . A.B. Sociology . . I.S.A CRAIG BOOHER, Sullivan . . A.B. Chemistry . . Alpha Tau Omega; Y.M.C.A.; Der Deutsche Verein .... MARGARET ANNA BOONSHOT, Loogootee . . B.S. Education . . I.S.A.; F.T.A.; Secretary, Classical Club; Vice-President, Eta Sigma Phi; Kappa Phi; Wesley Foundation .... BUD BORNEMAN, Elkhart . . A.B. History . . Sigma Chi; Sophomore Track Manager .... MURIEL M. BOTNER, Indianapolis . . B.S. Education . . Education Club .... DOROTHY ELLEN BOTTORFF, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . Treasurer, Phi Omega Pi; Girls ' Glee Club; Jackson Club; Omi- cron Delta; Y.W.C.A. Third Row NAOMI BONNIE BOUCHARD, South Bend . . B.S. Education . . Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; Wesley Foundation Cabinet; President, Kappa Phi .... AL BRAGALONE, Campbell, Ohio . . B.S. Education . . Theta Chi; Sphinx Club; Varsity Football; I Men ' s Club .... GEORGE BRICKLEY, Muncie . . B.S. Business . .Theta Chi; Alpha Kappa Psi . . . . HAL LEWIS BRIDGE, Tipton . . B.S. Business . . Phi Delta Theta; Red Book Staff; Y.M.C.A MYRTLE BRIER, Indianapolis . . B.S. Home Economics . . Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; Home Economics Club; President, Omicron Nu . . . . JIM BRIGGS, Geneva . . B.S. Business . . Phi Delta Theta .... LAURA KATHRYN BRILEY, Shelbyville . . B.S. Business . . Omicron Delta; Y.W.C.A.; Cosmopolitan Club; Account- ing Club; Kappa Phi ... . PETER E. BROADBENT, Elkhart . . B.S. Business . . Management Club; Insurance Club; Freshman Basketball; Y.M.C.A. 286 First Row CHARLES E. BATES, Connersville . . B.S. Business .... WILLIAM R. BAUGH, Evansville . . B.S. Business .... THELMA REED BAUGHMAN, Pineville, Kentucky . . M.S. Education .... HERSCHEL R. BEASLEY, Linton . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; Management Club .... CHARLES C. BEAVER, Rensselaer . . A.B. Spanish .... EMIL CHARLES BECK, Medora . . B.S. Busi- ness . . President, Accounting Club; Union Board; Alpha Kappa Psi; Wesley Foundation Council .... WINSTON BEDWELL, Bloomington . . B.S. Chemistry . . Secretary, Flame Club; Treasurer, Alpha Chi Sigma; Sigma Epsilon Theta; Y.M.C.A EDITH ELSIE BEHRENS, Anderson . . A.B. Psychology . . Delta Delta Delta; Sigma Theta Tau ; Y.W.C.A.; W.A.A.; Girls ' Glee Club. Second Row MARJORIE BENNINGHOFF, Ft. Wayne . . B.S. Education . . Chi Omega; University Theatre .... BLANCHE A. BENTON, Elberfeld . . B.S. Education .... BRUCE BENWARD, Cedar City, Utah . . B.M. Piano . . Phi Eta Sigma; Marching Hundred; University Symphony Orchestra; Camera Club; Der Deutsche Verein .... LUCY MARIAN BERKEY, Salem . . A.B. Fine Arts . . I.S.A.; Daubers Club; Y.W.C.A RUTH BERMAN, Hartford, Connecticut . . A.B. Home Economics . . Home Economics Club; Omicron Nu . . . . JEAN BERNARD, Muncie . . A.B. Spanish . . Kappa Alpha Theta .... MORRIS BEST, New Albany . . A.B. Chemistry . . Flame Club .... ROBERT BETHEA, Madison . . A.B. Anatomy and Physiology . . Theta Kappa Psi. Third Row NANCY W. BIDDLE, Bloomington . . A.B. Fine Arts . . President, Kappa Alpha Theta; Mortar Board; Pleiades; Junior Prom Committee; President, Daubers Club; Board of Standards; Jordan River Revue; Y.W.C.A. Council; W.A.A.; Le Cercle Fran- cois; Collegiate Who ' s Who; Senior Memorial Committee .... DOROTHY J. BILLINGS, Greensburg . . B.S. Education . . Al- pha Omicron Pi; Y.W.C.A. Council; Coed Counsellor; Le Cercle Francois; F.T.A.; Education Club .... ELMER BILLINGS, Wash- ington . . A.B. Chemistry . . Marching Hundred; Der Deutsche Verein; Theta Kappa Psi ... . DAVID BLACK, Bloomington . . B.S. Business . . Acacia; Y.M.C.A ROBERT GERALD BLACKBURN, Lawrenceburg . . B.S. Business .... MARY BLACKMORE, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . Treasurer, Home Economics Club; Le Cercle Francois; Girls ' Glee Club; Omicron Nu .... RAY CHARLES BLAKELY, Bloomington . . B.S. Business . . Advertising Club; Management Club; Insurance Club; Y.M.C.A. .... WILLIAM M. BLOOM, Columbia City . . LL.B. Law . . President, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Skull and Crescent; Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Sigma Alpha; Tau Kappa Alpha; Varsity Baseball; Varsity Debating; President, Phi Delta Phi; Law Journal Board; Law Club. SAMUEL L. BLUE THEODORE E. BOCKSTAHLER HERMAN HENRY BOCKSTEGE, Jr. JOHN W. BOEHNE FELIX BOGART DALE H. BOGGY BETTY MARGARET ANN BOHANNON BOHNERT BETTY BONATH ANGELO BONAVENTURA AUDREY BOND CRAIG BOOHER MARGARET A. BOONSHOT BUD BORNEMAN MURIEL M. DOROTHY ELLEN BOTNER BOTTORFF NAOMI BONNIE AL BRAGALONE GEORGE BOUCHARD BRICKLEY HAL LEWIS MYRTLE BRIER BRIDGE JIM BRIGGS LAURA KATHRYN PETER E. BRILEY BROADBENT 287 First Row JANET H. CARR, Rushville . . A.B. Government . . Alpha Lambda Delta; Le Cercle Francois; Pi Sigma Alpha; Foulke Club .... MARY A. CARSON, Lafayette . . A.B. French . . President, Delta Delta Delta; President, Pan-Hellenic Council; Pi Lamb- da Theta; Pleiades; R.O.T.C. Sponsor; Jordan River Revue; 1940 Arbutus Staff; Cabaret Show; Coed Counsellor; Girls ' Glee Club; Senior Breakfast Committee .... JOHN JULIAN CARTER, Crawfordsville . . B.S. Business .... FRED EWING CASE, Logansport . . B.S. Business . . Secretary, Board of Aeons; Vice-President, Union Board; Varsity Debate; I.S.A. Council; Flame Club; Blue Key; Scabbard and Blade; Tau Kappa Alpha; Vice-President, Management Club; Collegiate Who ' s Who; Chair- man, Senior Invitations Committee .... REX CHADWICK, New Castle . . B.S. Business . . Treasurer, Sigma Nu .... PEGGY CHAILLE, Bloomington . . B.S. Home Economics . . Home Economics Club; Pi Lambda Theta; Omicron Nu; Daubers Club; Y.W.C.A.; Coed Counsellor .... JOHN CHAPPELL, Petersburg . . LL.B. . . Phi Delta Phi ... . ROBERT N. CHATTIN, Union City . . B.S. Medicine . . Alpha Tau Omega; Phi Eta Sigma; Skull and Crescent; Phi Chi. Second Row ROGER H. CHESTER, Elkhart . . A.B. Chemistry . . Sigma Chi ... . JAMES E. CLARY, Gary . . B.S. Education .... EVELYN E. CLINTON, Vincennes . . B.S. Home Economics . . Delta Sigma Theta .... MARGERY DEAN COHEE, Frankfort . . A.B. Home Economics . . Alpha Omicron Pi; Y.W.C.A.; F.T.A.; Home Economics Club .... GLEN WILLIAM COLEMAN, Covington . . B.S. Business . . Rifle Team; Accounting Club; Education Club; F.T.A HAROLD COLEMAN, Trenton, New Jersey . . A.B. Government . . Pi Lambda Phi; Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Eta Sigma; Senior Wrestling Manager; Pi Sigma Alpha; Freshman Rifle Team .... J. W. COLGLAZIER, Salem . . A.B. Chemistry . . Sigma Chi; Alpha Chi Sigma .... WILLIAM L. COLIP, South Bend . . B.S. Medicine. JAMES R. BURCH KATHRYN LUCILE BURKET REGINALD BURKHART ROBERT E. BURNETT JEAN ELEANOR BURNS JACK LESLIE BUSH HELENE BUTZ MARGARET JOHN GEORGI SHIRLEY BYRNE EUGENE CABAGE MARION J. DEAN JACKSON BUZOLICH BYERS CALBECK CALL BETTY JANE CAMPBELL + M EDWARD CARLSON STEWART E. CARLSON PAUL CARNES 288 ROGER H. CHESTER JAMES E. CLARY EVELYN E. MARGERY GLEN WILLIAM HAROLD J. W. CLINTON DEAN COHEE COLEMAN COLEMAN COLGLAZIER WILLIAM L. COLIP First Row WILFRED BROCKMAN, Fulda . . A.B. Chemistry .... JACK F. BROOKBANK, Bloomington . . B.S. Business . . Pershing Rifles; Insurance Club; Advertising and Merchandising Club; Management Club .... AGNES PATRICIA BROWN, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . Treasurer, Pi Beta Phi; Omicron Delta; Ed ' s Roommate ; Y.W.C.A EUGENE W. BROWN, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . Secretary, Acacia; Accounting Club; Alpha Kappa Psi; Scabbard and Blade; Pershing Rifles; 1940 Arbutus Staff .... BERYL ANN BROWNELL, Valparaiso . . A.B. Journalism . . Phi Mu; W.A.A. Board; Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; Editor, Coed Reporter; Editor, Freshman Handbook; Pleiades; Night Editor, Indiana Daily Student .... CLARENCE E. BRUNNER, Liberty . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; Varsity Baseball .... CHARLES BOYD BUNDY, New Philadelphia . . B.S. Education .... JIM O. BURCH, Hammond . . B.S. Business . . Y.M.C.A. Second Row JAMES R. BURCH, Hope . . B.S. Business . . Phi Eta Sigma .... KATHRYN LUCILE BURKET, Winchester . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; Coed Counsellor .... REGINALD BURKHART, Bloomington . . B.S. Chemistry . . American Chemical Society Affiliate .... ROBERT E. BURNETT, Rushvilie . . B.S. Education . . Varsity Track; Tonight At Eight ; Vodvil Varieties .... JEAN ELEA- NOR BURNS, Mentone . . B.P.S.M. Vocal Emphasis . . Y.W.C.A.; President, Alpha Gamma Sigma; Pro-Music Club; Girls ' Glee Club; Choral Union; University Orchestra; Coed Counsellor; Jordan River Revue .... JACK LESLIE BUSH, Salem . . B.S. Busi- ness . . Alpha Kappa Psi; Accounting Club .... JULIA BUTT, Miamisburg, Ohio . . A.B. History . . Delta Zeta; W.A.A.; His- tory Club .... HELENE BUTZ, Gary . . A.B. French . . I.S.A.; Le Cercle Francois; Der Deutsche Verein; Education Club; Cosmo- politan Club. Third Row MARGARET BUZOLICH, South Bend . . B.S. Education . . Y.W.C.A.; Newman Club .... JOHN GEORGE BYERS, Hammond . . A.B. Journalism . . Delta Upsilon; Indiana Daily Student Staff; Sigma Delta Chi ... . SHIRLEY BYRNE, Charlestown . . A.B. Home Economics . . I.S.A.; Home Economics Club; Le Cercle Francois; Newman Club .... EUGENE CABAGE, Chandler . . A.B. Chemistry .... MARION J. CALBECK, Ligonier . . A.B. Chemistry . . Delta Tau Delta; American Chemical Society .... DEAN JACKSON CALL, Gaston . . B.S. Business . . Phi Delta Theta. Fourth Row BETTY JANE CAMPBELL, Owensboro, Ky. . . A.B. French . . Delta Delta Delta; Alpha Lambda Delta; Pi Lambda Theta; Coed Counsellor .... CAROLYN CAMPBELL, Anderson . . A.B. Sociology . . Delta Gamma .... EDWARD CARLSON, Peru . . B.S. Business . . Kappa Sigma .... STEWART E. CARLSON, LaPorte . . B.S. Business .... PAUL CARNES, Fairland . . A.B. History . . President, History Club; Glee Club. 289 TOM COSGROVE BARBARA JEAN COTTON A KEITH WILLIAM COX MARY J. CREASON hue, Mtfr- MNsi , =J WILLIAM H. CRIPE VERA ROWENA CUMMINGS ROBERT F. CURL JOHN HOTTEL CURRAN BYRON CURRIE JAMES CURRY JEANNETTE DAHL DAVID SCOTT DANIELS First Row NYCLETHA DANIELS, Gary . . B.S. Business . . Alpha Kappa Alpha .... DONALD C. DANIELSON, Pierre, S.D. . . B.S. Educa- tion . . President, Sigma Chi; Sphinx Club; Blue Key; Varsity Baseball; I Men ' s Club; Assistant Freshman Football Coach .... DONALD H. DANN, New Castle . . B.S. Business . . Sigma Alpha Mu . . . . BURCHARD R. DAVIDSON, Jr., Kokomo . . A.B. Government .... CAROLYN DAVIS, Evansville . . B.S. Education . . Coed Counselling Board; Mortar Board Recognition; Le Cercle Francois; Girls ' Glee Club; 1940 Arbutus Staff .... DON DAVIS, Culver . . B.S. Business . . Alpha Tau Omega; Board of Aeons; President, Collegiate Chamber of Commerce; President, Delta Sigma Pi; Sphinx Club; Dragon ' s Head; Accounting Club; Marching Hundred .... HELEN L. DAVIS, Westfield . . B.S. Business . . Alpha Chi Omega; Omicron Delta .... JOSEPH P. DAVIS, Indianapolis . . A.B. Economics . . Alpha Tau Omega; Economics Club; Y.M.C.A.; Cabaret Show; Jordan River Revue. Second Row RICHARD MERRILL DAVIS, Marion . . A.B. Chemistry . . Phi Kappa Psi; Skull and Crescent; University Symphony Orchestra; Y.M.C.A. Cabinet; Der Deutsche Verein .... RUTH DAVIS, Indianapolis . . A.B. Home Economics . . Home Economics Club; Treasurer, Omicron Nu; Alpha Lambda Delta .... ELOISE DEAHL, South Bend . . A.B. English . . Alpha Chi Omega; Y.W.C.A EVELYN MAY DeBRULER, Huntingburg . . B.S. Home Economics . . Home Economics Club; Cosmopolitan Club; F.T.A.; Y.W.C.A BERNADINE DEE, Indianapolis . . A.B. Sociology . . Sigma De lta Tau; Le Cercle Francois; Coed Coun- sellor; English Club; Riding Club; Hiking Club .... RICHARD E. DERBY, Elkhart . . A.B. Chemistry . . Acacia .... MARY JOAN DeVOL, Columbia City . . B.S. Education .... SHIRLEY DEWAR, Oak Park, III. . . A.B. Economics . . Delta Gamma. 290 First Row ROBERT EDWARD COLLIGNON, Columbus . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; Y.M.C.A.; Management Club . . Sullivan . . B.S. Business .... ROBERT COLLINS, Kokomo . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; Accounting Club COMBS, Worthington . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; Y.M.C.A.; Management Club; Advertising Club . COMPTON, Hope . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; Management Club. RALPH COLLINS, Jr., . . ALBERT RONALD . . DAVID WILLIAM Second Row H. LOUIS CONN, Danville . . A.B. Chemistry . . Vice-President, Kappa Delta Rho; Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Eta Sigma; Der Deutsche Verein; Junior Track Manager; Vice-President, Inter-Fraternity Council; Phi Chi .... WILLIAM COON, Greenfield . . A.B. Psychology . . Alpha Tau Omega; Freshman Track; Der Deutsche Verein .... MILDRED MAE COOPER, South Bend . . B.S. Business . . Alpha Omicron Pi; Omicron Delta; Accounting Club; Coed Counsellor .... ANNE MARIE CORNWELL, Indianapolis . . A.B. Psychology .... SUE CORTER, Bloomington . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; Board of Directors, Collegiate Chamber of Commerce; Board of Standards; Omicron Delta; Y.W.C.A. Third Row TOM COSGROVE, Hammond . . B.S. Business . . Treasurer, Phi Delta Theta; Inter-Fraternity Council; Management Club .... BARBARA JEAN COTTON, Indianapolis . . A.B. Home Economics . . Home Economics Club; Girls ' Glee Club .... ELVERA COX, Crown Point . . B.P.S.M. Vocal Emphasis . . Pro-Music Club; Sigma Alpha Iota; University Orchestra; Girls ' Glee Club .... KEITH WILLIAM COX, Terre Haute . . B.S. Business . . Treasurer, Delta Sigma Pi; Secretary, Phi Eta Sigma; Beta Gamma Sigma; Scabbard and Blade; Secretary, Alpha Phi Omega; Pershing Rifles; Crack Drill Squad; Accounting Club .... SEBRA ELLEN COX, Fowler . . B.S. Education . . R.N. Club .... YVONNE CRAIG, Oak Park, III. . A.B. Economics . . Delta Gamma .... MARY RUTH CRAVENS, Toledo, Ohio . . A.B. Chemistry . . Delta Gamma .... MARY J. CREASON, Anderson . . A.B. Psychology . . Y.W.C.A.; Der Deutsche Verein; Coed Counsellor. Fourth Row WILLIAM H. CRIPE, Bedford . . A.B. Chemistry .... VERA ROWENA CUMMINGS, Norman . . B.S. Education . . I.S.A.; Y.W.C.A.; Chi Gamma; Pro-Music Club .... ROBERT F. CURL, South Bend . . B.S. Business . . Delta Tau Delta .... JOHN HOTTEL CURRAN, Milroy . . B.S. Business . . Insurance Club; Advertising Club .... BYRON CURRIE, Indianapolis . . A.B. Chemistry .... JAMES CURRY, Bloomington . . A.B. Music .... JEANNETTE DAHL, Princeton, III. . A.B. English .... DAVID SCOTT DANIELS, Smithville . . B.S. Business . . Treasurer, I.S.A.; Board of Aeons; Phi Eta Sigma; Accounting Club; Y.M.C.A.; Flame Club; Family Portrait ; Collegiate Who ' s Who; Senior Memorial Committee. NYCLETHA DANIELS DONALD C. DANIELSON DONALD H. DANN BURCHARD R. DAVIDSON CAROLYN DAVIS DON DAVIS HELEN L. DAVIS JOSEPH P. DAVIS RICHARD MERRILL RUTH DAVIS DAVIS ELOISE DEAHL EVELYN MAY BERNADINE DEE RICHARD E. DEBRULER DERBY MARY JOAN SHIRLEY DEWAR DEVOL 291 First Row ROBERT J. DUFFNER, Ft. Wayne . . A.B. Chemistry . . Theta Kappa Psi . . . . PAT DUFFY, Terre Haute . . B.S. Medicine . . Nu Sigma Nu . . . . WILLIAM P. DUGGER, Franklin . - B.S. Business .... JAMES A. DURHAM, Berea, Ky. . . LL.B. . . Kappa Sigma; Board of Editors, Indiana Law Journal .... LUCILE DYER, Indianapolis . . A.B. Home Economics . . Delta Delta Delta; Y.W.C.A.; Economics Club. Second Row JOHN CEDRIC EASON, Elkhart . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A. Council; Union Board; Vice-President, Delta Sigma Pi; President, Westminster Foundation; Pershing Rifles; Y.M.C.A.; Cosmopolitan Club .... NORMAN EGGERS, Whiting . . B.S. Business . . Beta Theta Pi ... . WALTER J. EGNER, San Pierre . . B.S. Business .... JOHANNA EINIKIS, Gary . . A.B. Sociology . . I.S.A.; Girls ' Glee Club; Le Cercle Francois .... ROGER WILLIAMS EISINGER, Jr., Washington, D.C. . . B.S. Business . . Treasurer, Phi Gamma Delta; Pershing Rifles; Scabbard and Blade; Skull and Crescent; Junior Swimming Manager. Third Row JUNE ELKINS, Evansville . . A.B. History . . Alpha Chi Omega .... ROBERT ELLISON, Shelbyville . . A.B. Government . . Phi Delta Theta .... MARY ANNETTE ELSNER, Seymour . . A.B. Sociology . . Pi Beta Phi; Pleiades; Board of Standards; W.A.A. Board; Associate Business Manager, 1941 Arbutus; Business Staff, University Theatre; Coed Counsellor; Modern Dance Club .... CARL F. ELSTER, Hammond . . B.S. Education .... MARY R. EMAHISER, Akron . . B.S. Business . . President, Zeta Tau Alpha; Pleiades; Pan-Hellenic Council; Y.W.C.A.; Omicron Delta .... JANETTE ESAREY, Bloomington . . A.B. English . . Kappa Alpha Theta; English Club; Girls ' Glee Club .... JOHN THOMAS ESMON, Indianapolis . . A.B. Chemistry . . Marching Hun- dred; Theta Kappa Psi ... . TINKER ETCHESON, Bainbridge . . B.S. Business . . Treasurer, Delta Chi; Inter-Fraternity Council; Accounting Club; Advertising Club. Fourth Row HORACE L. EVANS, Indianapolis . . A.B. Spanish . . Kappa Alpha Psi; Le Cercle Francois .... MARJORY EVANS, Chicago, III. . . B.S. Medical Technology .... IRA FAITH, Evansville . . B.S. Medicine . . Phi Beta Pi; Skeleton Club .... JOHN D. FALLS, Hammond . . A.B. Government . . Vice-President, Theta Chi; Editor, The Folio; Inter-Fraternity Council; Indiana Daily Student Staff .... MARGARET THERESE FARGO, Indianapolis . . A.B. English . . Alpha Chi Omega; Secretary, Mortar Board; President, Tau Kappa Alpha; Varsity Debate; Junior Prom Committee; Neizer Debating Award; Secretary, A.W.S.; Alpha Lambda Delta; Board of Standards; Merry Wives of Windsor ; Student Government Committee; Collegiate Who ' s Who; Secretary, Senior Class .... ROBERT DALE FARLEY, Bloomfield . . B.S. Business. . . . JACK FARRIS, Washington . . B.S. Medicine . . Delta Chi .... CHARLES A. FEEGER, Richmond . . B.S. Business . . Vice-President, Phi Kappa Psi; Sphinx Club; Blue Key; Scabbard and Blade; Delta Sigma Pi; Inter-Fraternity Council; Sophomore Baseball Manager; Pershing Rifles; Crimson Stags; Senior Intra- mural Manager; Senior Invitations Committee. BETTY JEANNE JEAN DICKSON GREY DIMOND LORETTA DINESS RUTH V. D1PPEU G. GERALDINE RUTH ALDRIDGE DORIS DOBSON DICKERSON DIXON DIXON ROBERT DARR LORRAINE ANNE DOUGLAS LELAND DODD DORTON DOWNARD BETTY LILLIAN MILAN A. DUDAS DRESSEL 292 JUNE ELKINS ROBERT ELLISON MARY ANNETTE CARL F. ELSTER MARYR. JANETTE ESAREY JOHN THOMAS TINKER ELSNER EMAHISER ESMON ETCHESON HORACE L. MARJORY EVANS IRA FAITH JOHN D. FALLS MARGARET ROBERT DALE JACK FARRIS CHARLES EVANS FARGO FARLEY FEEGER First Row BETTY JEANNE DICKERSON, Ladoga . . A.B. Latin . . Alpha Lambda Delta; Eta Sigma Phi; Classical Club; Pi Lambda Theta; Coed Counsellor .... JEAN DICKSON, Lowell . . A.B. Mathematics . . Secretary, Pi Beta Phi; Editor-in-Chief, 1942 Arbutus; Phi Beta Kappa; Euclidean Circle; Le Cercle Francais; Y.W.C.A GREY DIMOND, Terre Haute . . B.S. Medicine . . Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Nu Sigma Nu . . . . LORETTA DINESS, Gary . . A.B. Sociology . . Sigma Delta Tau; Religious Cabinet; Coed Counsellor; Hillel Foundation .... RUTH V. DIPPELL, Huntington . . A.B. Zoology . . Y.W.C.A.; Der Deutsche Verein; American Chemical Society . . . . G. GERALDINE DIXON, Waterloo . . B.S. Education . . I.S.A.; Y.W.C.A.; Education Club .... RUTH ALDRIDGE DIXON, Bloomington . . B.P.S.M. Vocal Emphasis . . Alpha Lambda Delta; Y.W.C.A.; Pro-Music Club; Girls ' Glee Club; Coed Counsellor; Choral Union; The Gondoliers .... DORIS DOBSON, Bloomington . . B.S. Home Economics . . Vice- President, Delta Tau Mu; Treasurer, Home Economics Club. Second Row ROBERT DARR DODD, South Bend . . B.S. Medicine . . Nu Sigma Nu . . . . LORRAINE DORTON, Bloomington . . B.S. Home Economics . . Home Economics Club; W.A.A ANNE DOUGLAS, Shelbyville . . A.B. Journalism . . Sigma Kappa; Theta Sigma Phi; Editor-in-Chief, The Indiana Daily Student; Euclidean Circle .... LELAND FRANKLIN DOWNARD, Liberty . . B.S. Medicine .. Phi Chi ... . ROBERT J. DOXTATOR, Mishawaka . . B.S. Education . . I.S.A.; Varsity Debate Team; Much Ado About Nothing ; Radio Theatre .... ELISABETH JOAN DOYLE, Bloomington . . A.B. Journalism . . Delta Gamma; Indiana Daily Student Staff; Le Cercle Francais; History Club; Associate Editor, A.W.S. Handbook; Secretary, Newman Club .... BETTY LILLIAN DRESSEL, Buffalo, N.Y. . . B.S. Education .... MILAN A. DUDAS, Whiting . . B.S. Business. 293 JOHN R. FEIGHNER RUTHE JOANNA EDGAR FERREY RUSSELL FIEDLER SHIRLEY FELKINS FINE JAMES FISCHER THERESA FISHER VERNA FISCHVOGT JAMES S. FITZPATRICK J. LLOYD FITZPATRICK ANNETTE FORD J. C. FORSYTH BETTY MARIE DEAN FOSTER MARY LOUISE WINSTON C. FOSS FOUNTAIN FOURNIER First Row ORVILLE T. FOX, Jeflfersonville . . LL.B. . . Phi Kappa Psi; Indiana Law Journal Board; Phi Delta Phi; Beta Gamma Sigma; Sigma Delta Chi; Senior Cabinet, Y.M.C.A.; Blue Key; Phi Eta Sigma; Tau Kappa Alpha; Editor-in-Chief, Indiana Daily Student .... DONALD T. FOXWORTHY, Madison . . A.B. Anatomy . . Phi Eta Sigma; Der Deutsche Verein .... RICHARD B. FRANCE, Gary . . B.S. Business . . Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Alpha Kappa Psi; Advertising Club .... ROBERT E. FRANK, Anderson . . B.S. Business . . President, Sigma Nu; Business Manager, 1942 Arbutus; Dragon ' s Head; Sphinx Club; Y.M.C.A TOOTS FRANK, Ft. Wayne . . A.B. Spanish . . Secretary, Pi Beta Phi; Cabaret; Jordan River Revue; Y.W.C.A.; Le Cercle Francois; Republican Club; Spanish Club .... ROBERT D. FRANKLIN, Frankfort . . B.S. Business . . Alpha Kappa Psi; Y.M.C.A VERNON D. FRAZE, Union City . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; Y.M.C.A VERA FREED, Odon . . B.S. Education . . I.S.A.; Student Baptist Group. Second Row CHARLOTTE FREELAND, Bloomfield . . A.B. Psychology . . I.S.A.; Der Deutsche Verein; Cosmopolitan Club; Alpha Lambda Delta .... HUGH G. FREELAND, Bloomfield . . LL.B. . . Treasurer, Law Club; Phi Delta Phi ... . MARGARET FROESCHKE, Linton . . A.B. Home Economics . . Alpha Chi Omega; Y.W.C.A.; W.A.A.; Home Economics Club; Le Cercle Francois .... CHARLES FROHMAN, Columbus . . B.S. Chemistry . . Kappa Delta Rho; Alpha Chi Sigma .... JUD FROMMER, Indianapolis . . A.B. Jour- nalism . . Secretary, Sigma Alpha Mu; Senior Council, H i i lei Foundation; Night Editor, Indiana Daily Student .... JACK GABLE, New Albany . . B.S. Business . . Marching Hundred; Kappa Kappa Psi; Advertising and Merchandising Club .... JANE GAFF, South Bend . . A.B. English . . Alpha Chi Omega; President, Freshman Y.W.C.A.; Pleiades; Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; A.W.S. Council; Chairman, Coed Counselling Board .... NED E. GARDNER, Greensburg . . B.M. Music . . Pro-Music Club; Men ' s Glee Club; Choral Union. Third Row MARSENA M. GARRETSON, Hammond . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; Omicron Delta .... GLEN B. GARROTT, Battle Ground . . B.S. Business .... ROBERT E. GATES, Columbia City . . B.S. Business . . President, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; President, Senior Class; President, Union Board; Senior Swimming Manager; Business Manager, University Theatre; Sphinx Club; Blue Key; President, Dragon ' s Head; Crimson Stags; Phi Eta Sigma; Skull and Crescent; Tau Kappa Alpha; Delta Sigma Pi; Pi Sigma Alpha; Chair- man, 1941 Junior Prom Committee; Chairman, Student Refugee Committee; Inter-Fraternity Council; Varsity Debate; Dolphin Club; Student Government Committee; I Men ' s Club; Collegiate Who ' s Who .... JEANNE GIFFORD, Chicago, III. . . A.B. Journalism . . Delta Delta Delta; 1940 Arbutus Staff; Indiana Daily Student Staff; Bored Walk Staff; Pleiades; Y.W.C.A PHYLLIS GILL, Bloomington . . A.B. Chemistry . . Alpha Lambda Delta; Der Deutsche Verein; Skeleton Club. Fourth Row JANE GILLESPIE, Indianapolis . . A.B. English . . Kappa Alpha Theta; History Club; Y.W.C.A.; Cabaret .... PAUL GILLIATT, Young Creeks . . B.S. Education . . Pershing Rifles; Rifle Team .... WILSON GITTLEMAN, Louisville, Ky. . . A.B. Chemistry . . Sigma Alpha Mu . . . . M. HELEN GLICK, Midland, Mich. . . B.S. Business .... ELLIS BASIL GODSEY, Amboy . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; Y.M.C.A.; Flame Club; Delta Sigma Pi; Westminster Foundation; Cosmopolitan Club. 294 First Row JOHN R. FEIGHNER, Marion . . B.S. Business . . Phi Gamma Delta; Varsity Tennis; Skull and Crescent; Sphinx Club; Men ' s Glee Club; Insurance Club .... RUTHE JOANNA FELKINS, Indianapolis . . B.S. Education . . W.A.A.; Kappa Phi ... . EDGAR FERREY, Columbia City . . A.B. Journalism . . Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Sigma Delta Chi; Associate Editor, Indiana Daily Student; Blue Key; State Fair Student; Sophomore Baseball Manager; Sophomore Yell Leader; Le Cercle Francois .... RUSSELL FIED- LER, Logansport . . B.S. Education . . I.S.A.; Phi Epsilon Kappa; Y.M.C.A.; Freshman Baseball .... SHIRLEY WINIFRED FINE, New Albany . . B.S. Education . . President, Sigma Delta Tau; Hillel Foundation; English Club; Radio Guild; Pan-Hellemc Council; Education Club; The Women .... JAMES FISCHER, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . Sigma Pi; Senior Football Manager; Board of Directors, Collegiate Chamber of Commerce; Bored Walk Staff .... THERESA HARRIETT FISHER, Evans- ville . . A.B. English .... VERNA FISCHVOGT, Dillsboro . . B.S. Home Economics . . I.S.A.; Y.W.C.A.; Home Economics Club; Education Club. Second Row JAMES S. FITZPATRICK, Bloomfield . . A.B. Chemistry . . Theta Kappa Psi; Phi Eta Sigma; PATRICK, Bloomington . . J.D. . . Beta Gamma Sigma; President, Y.M.C.A., 1938-1939; F Omega; Phi Eta Sigma; Scabbard and Blade; Alpha Kappa Psi; Indiana Law Journal; Ed South Bend . . A.B. History . . Delta Gamma; History Club; Y.W.C.A.; Coed Counsellor . B.S. Business . . President, Acacia; Freshman Football; Varsity Basketball; Sphinx Club . . A.B. English . . Vice-President, I.S.A.; Secretary, Tau Kappa Alpha; Alpha Lambda Delta; Coed Counselling Board; Senior Memorial Committee .... DEAN FOSTER, Bellflower, III. Kappa Delta Rho; Y.M.C.A.; University Theatre; Le Cercle Francois; Marching Hundred . ford . . B.S. Home Economics . . Alpha Lambda Delta; Omicron Nu; Home Economics C Frankfort . . A.B. Journalism . . Sigma Delta Chi; Editor-in-Chief, Indiana Daily Student; Phi Beta Kappa .... J. LLOYD FITZ- lame Club; Phi Delta Phi; Alpha Phi tor, Red Book .... ANNETTE FORD, . . . J. C. FORSYTH, Terre Haute . . . BETTY MARIE FOSS, Hammond . . Varsity Debate; Board of Standards; . . A.B. Psychology . . President, . . MARY LOUISE FOUNTAIN, Bed- lub . . . . WINSTON C. FOURNIER, Flame Club. £. Jr ' hM ORVILLET. FOX DONALD T. RICHARD B. ROBERT E. FRANK TOOTS FRANK ROBERT D. VERNON D. VERA FREED FOXWORTHY FRANCE FRANKLIN FRAZE CHARLOTTE HUGH G. MARGARET CHARLES JUD FROMMER JACK GABLE JANE GAFF NED E. GARDNER FREELAND FREELAND FROESCHKE FROHMAN 295 First Row KENNETH R. HARRER, Spencer . . B.S. Education .... ANNE HARRIOTT, Terre Haute . . A.B. Chemistry . . Kappa Alpha Theta .... DOROTHY HARROD, Laotto . . A.B. Home Economics . . Protestant Student Council; Secretary-Treasurer, Kappa Phi ... . MARTHA HARTMAN, Evansville . . A.B. English . . Delta Gamma .... THOMAS C. HASBROOK, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . President, Kappa Sigma; Skull and Crescent; Intramural Managers Association; Scabbard and Blade .... NORMAN HAS- LER, Worthington . . A.B. Chemistry . . Nu Sigma Nu ; Phi Eta Sigma; Phi Beta Kappa .... MARY HATTERSLEY, Ft. Wayne . . A.B. Sociology . . Pi Beta Phi; Y.W.C.A. Council; International Relations Club .... ELIZABETH M. HAUPT, Indianapolis . . B.P.S.M. Vocal Emphasis . . Secretary, Sigma Alpha Iota; Secretary, Pro-Music Club; Jordan River Revue. Second Row HAROLD B. HOUSER, North Liberty . . A.B. Anatomy . . Phi Chi; Phi Eta Sigma; Le Cercle Francois .... JOHN C. HAUSER, Jr., New Carlisle . . B.S. Business . . Advertising Club; Men ' s Glee Club; Y.M.C.A JEANNE KEITH HAYES, Washington . . A.B. History . . Pi Beta Phi; Y.W.C.A.; Jordan River Revue; Coed Counsellor; Riding Club; Le Cercle Francois; History Club .... GIL- MORE SMITH HAYNIE, Evansville . . LL.B. . . Phi Gamma Delta; Phi Delta Phi; Sphinx Club; Freshman Football; Varsity Ten- nis; Law Club; I Men ' s Club; Freshman Tennis Coach . . . . C. BLAINE HAYES, Jr., Corydon . . LL.B. . . Law Club .... HARRY J. HEBNER, Chicago, III. . . B.S. Business .... JEAN HELD, Morristown . . B.S. Business .... RICHARD W. HELD, LaPorte . . B.S. Business . . Lambda Chi Alpha. Third Row MARIANGENEEN HELVIE, Valparaiso . . A.B. Bacteriology . . Kappa Alpha Theta; Y.W.C.A.; Taps; University Choir; Silas, The Chore Boy .... MARY ELIZABETH HENDRICKS, Martinsville . . B.S. Business . . Kappa Kappa Gamma; Beta Gamma Sigma; Board of Directors, Collegiate Chamber of Commerce; President, Omicron Delta; President, Chi Gamma; Alpha Lambda Delta; Le Cercle Francois; Accounting Club; Y.W.C.A JAMES HENLEY, Carthage . . A.B. Economics . . Beta Theta Pi; Phi Beta Kappa .... MYRA JEAN HENNON, Bloomington . . A.B. Latin . . President, Eta Sigma Phi; Classical Club .... MRS. HERMAN S. HEPNER, Bloomington . . B.S. Medicine . . Skeleton Club .... EDWARD C. HERBERT, Gary . . B.S. Education . . President, Lambda Chi Alpha; Sphinx Club; Varsity Football; I Men ' s Club .... CLAUDE M. HEWITT, Marion . . A.B. Mathe- matics .... ELLIOTT HICKAM, Spencer . . A.B. Government . . Phi Kappa Psi. ( J ft --. lii i fe ATtfe RUSSEL GOEBEL ROBERT R. GOLDSTEIN FREDERICK RUTH J. GORDON PHYLLIS CARROLL C. CHALMERS L. HESTER LOUISE GORDON GOSHORN GOULD GOYERT GRAHAM BETTY GRIESEL H. HANLY HAMMEL CATHERINE J. HANCHER 296 HAROLD B. JOHN C. HAUSER JE ANNE KEITH GILMORE SMITH C. BLAINE HAYES HARRY J. HEBNER JEAN HELD RICHARD W. HOUSER HAYES HAYNIE HELD MARIANGENEEN MARY ELIZABETH JAMES HENLEY HELVIE HENDRICKS CLAUDE M. ELLIOTT HICKAM HEWITT First Row RUSSEL GOEBEL, Marion . . B.S. Dentistry . . Acacia; Delta Sigma Delta .... ROBERT R. GOLDSTEIN, Mishawaka . . B.S. Business . . Sigma Alpha Mu; Phi Eta Sigma; Beta Gamma Sigma .... FREDERICK GORDON, Rochester . . A.B. Chemistry . . Lambda Chi Alpha; Scabbard and Blade; Phi Eta Sigma; Varsity Baseball; American Chemical Society .... RUTH J. GOR- DON, Bryan, Texas . . B.S. Business . . President, Modern Dance Club; Board of Standards; Coed Counsellor .... PHYLLIS GOSHORN, Elkhart . . B.S. Education . . R.N. Club .... CARROLL C. GOULD, Patoka . . B.S. Education . . Phi Epsilon Kappa .... CHALMERS L. GOYERT, Bloomington . . B.S. Business . . Law Club; Flame Club; Scabbard and Blade; Cadet Colonel, R.O.T.C.; Beta Gamma Sigma; Phi Eta Sigma .... HESTER LOUISE GRAHAM, Sullivan . . B.S. Business . . Mortar Board; A.W.S. Council; Coed Counselling Board; Omicron Delta; Board of Directors, Collegiate Chamber of Commerce; W.A.A.; Beta Gamma Sigma; Senior Siwash Committee. Second Row ORRIS AVON GRAVES, Edinburgh . . B.S. Business .... FREDERICK GREEN, Ft. Wayne . . B.S. Medicine . . Kappa Alpha Psl . . . . PATRICIA ANNE GREEN, Bloomington . . A.B. Sociology .... ARTHUR GREENBURGH, Michigan City . A.B. Jour- nalism . . Le Cercle Francois; Bored Walk Staff; Indiana Daily Student Staff .... WHITNEY J. GREENBERG, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . Sigma Alpha Mu . . . . CHARLES F. GREGORY, Fremont . . B.S. Medicine . . Skeleton Club; Phi Rho Sigma .... BETTY JO GRESHAM, Bedford . . A.B. English . . I.S.A.; Theta Alpha Phi; Le Cercle Francois .... CLEO GRIEGER, Wanatah . . B.S. Home Economics . . I.S.A.; Home Economics Club; W.A.A.; Secretary, Education Club; F.T.A. Third Row BETTY GRIESEL, Crown Point . . B.S. Education . . W.A.A.; Education Club .... CAROL MOWBRAY GRIFFIN, Hammond . . A.B. Botany .... JOHN E. GRIGSBY, Bloomington . . B.S. Business .... EARL PAUL HAINES, Loogootee . . B.S. Business .... CHARLES HALE, Winslow . . A.B. History .... ROBERT O. HALL, Angola . . B.S. Business . . . . H. HANLY HAMMEL, Monon . . B.S ' . Business . . Gamma Eta Gamma; Flame Club; Guidon Club; Law Club .... CATHERINE J. HANCHER, Elwood . . B.S. Business . . Alpha Chi Omega; Y.W.C.A.; Omicron Delta. 297 FRED D. HOUSTON MARTHA ELLEN HOWARD PAUL E. HOWARD BILLY E. HUBBARD FRANK EDWARD JANE HUDSON HUBER NORMAN B. HUDSON HARRY E. HUFF Ik BETSY HUTCHINGS DELMER PAUL HYLTON DAVID E. HYNDMAN HAROLD LEON MARCILE A. IRLE GLENN W. IRWIN ROGER ISH IRICK HENRY V. BARBARA LOUIS H. JACOBS DOROTHY ROBERT P. JAY F. IAMONT ANN MARIE CAROLYN JACKOWSKI JACKSON JANSEN JENNINGS JARABAK JOHNSON 298 First Row ARTHUR E. HICKS, Indianapolis . . B.S. Chemistry . . Vice-President, Foulke Club; Fencing Club .... DORIS HILL, Trenton, N.J. . . A.B. English . . Alpha Kappa Alpha; Y.W.C.A.; Student Religious Cabinet .... JOHN D. HILL, Rockport . . B.S. Business . . Varsity Track; Pistol Club; Insurance Club .... NAT U. HILL, Bloomington . . B.S. Business . . Phi Kappa Psi; Varsity Wrest- ling. Second Row MARY ELLEN HINES, Auburn . . A.B. Fine Arts . . Kappa Kappa Gamma; Le Cercle Francois; Jordan River Revue; Y.W.C.A. .... EVERETT HOFFMAN, Evansville . . B.S. Education . . Phi Gamma Delta; Varsity Baseball; Varsity Basketball .... ROBERT M. HOFFMAN, Ft. Wayne . . B.S. Business . . Sigma Chi ... . CLAUDE D. HOLMES, Jr., Ft. Knox, Ky. . . A.B. Chemistry . . Sig- ma Nu; Marching Hundred. Third Row HAZEL LOIS HOLMGUIST, Chicago, III. . . A.B. Home Economics . . Le Cercle Francois; I.S.A.; Home Economics Club .... MIL- DRED HOROWITZ, Brooklyn, N.Y. . . A.B. English . . Treasurer, Sigma Delta Tau; Vice-President, Hillel Foundation,- Mortar Board Recognition; English Club; Le Cercle Francois; Coed Counsellor .... JACK H. HORTON, Marion . . B.S. Medicine . . Theta Kappa Psi .... D. SAMUEL HOSTETTER, Bainbridge . . B.P.S.M. Vocal Emphasis . . Delta Chi; Pro-Music Club; Men ' s Glee Club; Orchestra; The Gondoliers ; Alpha Kappa Psi; Sigma Epsilon Theta; Jordan River Revue; Inter-Fraternity Council .... CLARA ELEANOR HOUCK, Ft. Wayne . . A.B. Psychology . . Coed Counsellor; Alpha Gamma Sigma .... PRESTON S. HOUK, Portland . . A.B. Chemistry .... BETTY HOUSE, Atlanta . . B.S. Education . . Education Club; F.T.A FLOYD HOUSE, Bloomington . . B.S. Business . . Acacia; Sphinx Club; Spanish Club; Skull and Crescent; Inter-Fraternity Council. Fourth Row FRED D. HOUSTON, Indianapolis . . B.S. Medicine .... MARTHA ELLEN HOWARD, Anderson . . A.B. Psychology . . I.S.A. .... PAUL E. HOWARD, Connersville . . A.B. Economics . . I.S.A.; Der Deutsche Verein; Men ' s Glee Club; Choral Union; Y.M.C.A BILLY E. HUBBARD, Seymour . . A.B. Sociology . . Scabbard and Blade; Sigma Epsilon Theta; University Thea- tre; Y.M.C.A FRANK EDWARD HUBER, Cannelton . . B.S. Chemistry . . American Chemical Society .... JANE HUDSON, Detroit, Mich. . . A.B. Sociology . . President, Delta Zeta; Mortar Board; Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; Pleiades; Glee Club; A.W.S. Council; Senior Memorial Committee .... NORMAN B. HUDSON, Solsberry . . B.S. Education . . I.S.A.; Education Club; F.T.A HARRY E. HUFF, Grand Rapids, Mich. . . B.S. Business . . President, Delta Tau Delta; President, Inter-Fraternity Council; President, Intramural Association. Fifth Row BETSY HUTCHINGS, Indianapolis . . A.B. Journalism . . Delta Gamma; Theta Sigma Phi; Women ' s Editor, Indiana Daily Student .... JOSEPH L. HUTTON, Hammond . . A.B. Chemistry . . Delta Tau Delta; Camera Club; 1940 Arbutus Staff .... DELMER PAUL HYLTON, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . Alpha Kappa Psi; Accounting Club .... DAVID E. HYNDMAN, Bloomington . . B.S. Business . . Pershing Rifles; Roger Williams Fellowship; Protestant Student Council .... HAROLD LEON IRICK, Atlanta . . B.S. Business . . Accounting Club; Y.M.C.A MARCILE A. IRLE, Columbus . . B.S. Education . . President, Phi Mu; Pleia- des; President, Physical Education Club for Women; Y.W.C.A. Council; W.A.A. Board; Secretary, Oceanides .... GLENN W. IRWIN, Roachdale . . B.S. Medicine . . Alpha Tau Omega; Phi Eta Sigma; Nu Sigma Nu; Marching Hundred .... ROGER ISH, Waterloo . . A.B. Government. Sixth Row HENRY V. JACKOWSKI, East Chicago . . A.B. Chemistry . . Sigma Pi ... . BARBARA JACKSON, Orleans . . B.S. Education . . I.S.A.; W.A.A LOUIS H. JACOBS, Bedford . . B.S. Business . . Accounting Club; Advertising Club .... DOROTHY JAN- SEN, Indianapolis . . B.S. Education . . Pi Beta Phi; Y.W.C.A.; Junior Math Club; International Relations Club; Bored Walk Staff .... ROBERT P. JAY, Indianapolis . . A.B. Anatomy .. Nu Sigma Nu ... . F. LAMONT JENNINGS, Indianapolis . . A.B. Chem- istry . . Nu Sigma Nu . . . . ANN MARIE JARABAK, East Chicago . . B.S. Education .... CAROLYN JOHNSON, Crown Point . . B.S. Home Economics . . Chi Omega; Y.W.C.A.; Home Economics Club. 299 First Row C. ROY JOHNSON, Indianapolis . . A.B. Chemistry . . Theta Kappa Psi; Phi Eta Sigma; Kappa Kappa Psi; Marching Hundred; Concert Band .... EDNA M. JOHNSON, Bloomington . . B.S. Home Economics . . Phi Mu; Home Economics Club; W.A.A.; Y.W.C.A FRANCES CAROLYN JOHNSON, Scottsburg . . B.P.S.M. Vocal Emphasis . . President, Sigma Alpha Iota; Pro- Music Club .... JOSEPH THOMAS JOHNSON, Indianapolis . . A.B. Sociology . . Kappa Alpha Psi. Second Row LEWIS C. JOHNSON, Spiceland . . B.S. Business . . Business Manager and Treasurer, Men ' s Residence Center; Management Club .... ROBERT E. JOHNSON, LaPorte . . B.S. Business . . Sphinx Club; Delta Sigma Pi; Insurance Club; Sophomore Track Manager .... ROBERT S. JOHNSON, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . Delta Tau Delta .... ROSE JUDITH JOHNSON, Rich- mond . . A.B. Government. Third Row SAM W. D. JOHNSTON, Ft. Wayne . . B.S. Business . . Accounting Club; Delta Sigma Pi ... . CAROL ANN JONES, Oxford, Ohio . . B.S. Home Economics . . I.S.A.; President, Memorial Hall; W.A.A.; Home Economics Club; Coed Counsellor; Y.W.C.A. .... DAVID MIFFLIN JONES, Vincennes . . B.S. Medicine . . Sigma Nu . . . . EILEEN JONES, Chicago, III. . . A.B. Psychology . . I.S.A.; Coed Counsellor; President, Sycamore Hall .... ELEANOR JONES, Fairmount . . A.B. English . . Y.W.C.A.; Indiana Daily Student Staff; Education Club .... ERNEST CLIFTON JONES, Hartford City . . B.S. Business . . Varsity Track; Beta Gam- ma Sigma; Blue Key; Treasurer, Accounting Club; Executive Cabinet, Y.M.C.A.; President, Wesley Foundation; Phi Eta Sigma; S igma Epsilon Theta; Alpha Kappa Psi; Protestant Student Council; Student Religious Cabinet; Chairman, Senior Peace-Pipe Committee .... REX M. JOSEPH, Indianapolis . . A.B. Anatomy . . Freshman Debate; Phi Rho Sigma; Der Deutsche Verein; Skeleton Club .... WALTER T. JURGENSEN, Ft. Wayne . . A.B. Chemistry . . Phi Beta Pi. Fourth Row WALTER STEPHEN JURKIEWICZ, Hamtramck, Mich. . . B.S. Education . . Varsity Track; Varsity Football; I Men ' s Club; Newman Club; Bored Walk Staff .... CAMPBELL KANE, Valparaiso . . B.S. Education . . Phi Delta Theta; Sphinx Club; Union Board; Varsity Track; I Men ' s Club .... CAROL KARR, JefFersonville . . A.B. Chemistry . . Alpha Lambda Delta; lota Sigma Pi; Der Deutsche Verein; Coed Counsellor; W.A.A HELLEN KOTTLOWSKI, Indianapolis . . B.S. Medical Technology . . lota Sigma Pi ... . CAROL KEESLING, Markleville . . A.B. English . . Girls ' Glee Club; Le Cercle Francois; Treasurer, Forest Hall; Gondoliers ; Pirates of Penzance .... ELIZABETH ANN KEHR, Toledo, Ohio . . A.B. Sociology . . Pi Beta Phi; Y.W.C.A.; Sociology Club .... CLEMENT EARL KELLEY, Jr., Indianapolis . . A.B. Anatomy . . Phi Rho Sigma; Skeleton Club . . . MILTON T. KELLUM, Shirley . . B.S. Education. Fifth Row BARBARA ANN KEM, Marion . . B.S. Education . . I.S.A.; F.T.A.; Home Economics Club; Y.W.C.A STELLA KENNERLY, Speedway . . A.B. Fine Arts . . Zeta Tau Alpha; Y.W.C.A.; Le Cercle Francois; Education Club; Advertising Club .... JAMES KENT, Brookston . . LL.B. . . Phi Gamma Delta; Gamma Eta Gamma; Law Club .... BERNARD D. KERN, Newcastle . . B.S. Physics . . Euclidean Circle; Phi Eta Sigma; Der Deutsche Verein .... ERNEST L. KERN, Oakville . . B.S. Business .... GENE BERNARD KERN, Oakville . . B.S. Business . . Alpha Kappa Psi; Student War Council; President, Men ' s Residence Cen- ter; Flame Club .... JOHN E. KING, Seelyville . . B.S. Education . . Sigma Pi ... . MAURICE R. KIRKWOOD, Tipton . . B.S. Business . . Treasurer, Sigma Nu; President, Blue Key; Beta Gamma Sigma; Board of Directors, Collegiate Chamber of Com- merce, Dragon ' s Head; Advertising Club; President, Board of Aeons; Senior Siwash Committee; Phi Eta Sigma; Delta Sigma Pi; Crimson Stags. Sixth Row JACK MEREDITH KISTNER, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . Delta Sigma Pi; Management Club .... JAMES KNIGHT, Evans- ville . . B.S. Business . . Alpha Kappa Psi ... . MARY LOUISE KNOLL, Greencastle . . B.S. Education . . President, Tennis Club; W.A.A. Board .... MILDRED POPE KNOY, Paragon . . B.S. Education . . . . C. ELIZABETH KOLLMAN, Ft. Wayne . . B.S. Business . . Zeta Tau Alpha; Omicron Delta; Secretary, Chi Gamma; Y.W.C.A DORIS KONING, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . President, Sigma Kappa; Pleiades; Y.W.C.A. Council; Omicron Delta; Girls ' Glee Club; Chi Gamma .... WILLIAM A. KOONTZ, Roanoke . . A.B. Chemistry . . Theta Kappa Psi ... . ALBERT KOSNOFF, Goshen . . B.S. Business . . President, Pi Lambda Phi; Skull and Crescent; Treasurer, Inter-Fraternity Council; Advertising Club; Hi I lei Foundation; Theta Nu Epsilon. 300 WALTER STEPHEN CAMPBELL KANE CAROL KARR JURKIEWICZ HELLEN KOTTLOWSKI CAROL KEESLING ELIZABETH ANN CLEMENT EARL KEHR KELLEY, JR. (raJ i BARBARA ANN STELLA KENNERLY JAMES KENT KEM BERNARD D. ERNEST L. KERN GENE BERNARD JOHN E. KING MAURICE R. KERN KERN KIRKWOOD JACK MEREDITH JAMES KNIGHT MARY LOUISE MILDRED POPE KISTNER KNOLL KNOY C. ELIZABETH DORIS KONING KOLLMAN WILLIAM A. ALBERT KOSNOFF KOONTZ 301 FRANK KOTORA HELEN LUISE KREUZBERGER KURTKREYUNG THOMAS H. KRiSE GERALDINE MAE JOHN KRUEGER KRUEGER WALTER G. KRUMWEIDE WILLIS KUNZ CARL LAKOSKY IRMA LANPHIER PATRICK B. LARKIN MARTHA HENRY LEBIODA FRANCES GAY RUTH M. LEFFORGE CHARLES LEGEMAN JOHN LEININGER C.STEPHEN ALBERT E. LESSER BEATRYCE LEWIS MARTHA L. LEWIS MARY JANE RICHARD LEWIS TED LEWIS LEONARD LEWIS First Row SVEA LINDQUIST, Chesterton . . B.S. Education . . I.S.A.; R.N. Club; Cosmopolitan Club .... JOSEPH DALE LIPPS, Bloomington . . A.B. Botany .... HARRY B. LITTELL, Bloomington . . A.B. Government . . Flame Club; Scabbard and Blade; Phi Beta Kappa; Lieut. Colonel, Pershing Rifles; Law Club; Newman Club; Le Cercle Francois; Phi Eta Sigma .... LEON H. LITTLE, Jr., Linden . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; President, Men ' s Residence Center; Board of Aeons; Y.M.C.A.; Men ' s Glee Club; Intramural Managers Association; University Radio Technician; Flame Club .... CARLOS LLABRES, Caguas, Puerto Rico . . A.B. Zoology . . I.S.A.; Cosmopolitan Club .... JOHN LLOYD, Brazil . . A.B. History . . History Club; International Relations Club; Marching Hundred .... ROBERT PAUL LLOYD, Ft. Wayne . . B.S. Medicine . . Skeleton Club; Y.M.C.A CECIL LOCKWOOD, Jr., Bluffton . . A.B. Government . . Kappa Sigma. Second Row HELEN LOVE, Niles, Mich. . . A.B. Psychology .... HARVEY D. LOVETT, Zionsville . . B.S. Medicine . . Phi Beta Pi; Der Deutsche Verein .... VIRGINIA LUDWICK, South Bend . . B.S. Business . . Alpha Chi Omega; W.A.A.; Alpha Lambda Delta .... DEDE LUNG, Kokomo . . A.B. Spanish . . Kappa Kappa Gamma; Pleiades; Junior Prom Queen; Coed Counsellor; Y.W.C.A.; Spanish Club .... WILLIAM LYON, Madison . . B.S. Business . . Secretary, Sigma Chi; Varsity Golf; Inter-Fraternity Council .... HUGH BEST McADAMS, Boswell . . B.S. Medicine . . Beta Theta Pi; Varsity Track; Nu Sigma Nu . . . . LOUIS E. McBRIDE, Crawfordsville . . B.S. Business . . Management Club .... NORMA LEE McCLINTOCK, Indianapolis . . A.B. French . . Secretary, Alpha Omicron Pi; Jordan River Revue; Cabaret Show; Le Cercle Francois; Y.W.C.A. Council; Secretary, Euclidean Circle; Treasurer, F.T.A.; Mortar Board Recognition. Third Row BILLIE LUCILLE McCLURE, Princeton . . A.B. English . . I.S.A. Council; Y.W.C.A ROBERT L. McCLURE, Kokomo . . A.B. Government . . Phi Kappa Psi; Phi Eta Sigma; Yell Leader; Le Cercle Francois; Law Club .... ROBERT S. McCORMICK, Vin- cennes . . B.S. Business . . Sigma Nu; Indiana Daily Student Staff; Glee Club; Business Manager, Bored Walk; Guidon Club .... JACK McCRAY, Bluffton . . B.S. Business . . Kappa Sigma .... BETTE McDONALD, Ft. Wayne . . B.S. Education . . Chi Omega; Daubers Club; Y.W.C.A.; Education Club .... GEORGE D. McDONALD, Farmersburg . . B.S. Business . . Scabbard and Blade; Pershing Rifles; Crack Drill Squad .... RICHARD LEROY McDONALD, Elkhart . . B.S. Business . . Secretary, Insur- ance Club; Delta Sigma Pi; Y.M.C.A.; Pershing Rifles .... MARY INA McELHINNEY, Bloomington . . A.B. Latin . . Eta Sigma Phi; Pi Lambda Theta; Classical Club. 302 First Row FRANK KOTORA, Gary . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; Y.M.C.A.; Management Club; Advertising and Marketing Club .... HELEN LUISE KREUZBERGER, Evansville . . A.B. Sociology . . Y.W.C.A.; Newman Club; Outing Club .... KURT KREYLING, Evansville . . A.B. Economics . . Beta Theta Pi ... . THOMAS H. KRISE, Auburn . . B.S. Business . . Phi Gamma Delta; Y.M.C.A.; Rifle and Pistol Club; Senior Baseball Manager .... GERALDINE MAE KRUEGER, Cleveland, Ohio . . B.S. Education . . Sigma Kap- pa; Physical Education Club for Women .... JOHN KRUEGER, Gary . . A. B. Chemistry . . Union Board; Blue Key; Sphinx Club; Board of Aeons; Senior Track Manager; Junior Prom Committee; Social Chairman, Men ' s Residence Center; Chairman, Senior Siwash Committee .... WALTER G. KRUMWEIDE, Elkhart . . A.B. Economics . . Delta Upsilon; Economics Club; Le Cercle Francois; Y.M.C.A WILLIS KUNZ, Bloomington . . A.B. Government . . Pershing Rifles; Law Club. Second Row CARL LAKOSKY, Cleveland, Ohio . . B.S. Education . . Phi Epsilon Kappa .... IRMA LANPHIER, Mattoon, III. . . B.S. Busi- ness . . I.S.A.; Omicron Delta; Education Club .... PATRICK B. LARKIN, Loogootee . . B.S. Business . . Scabbard and Blade; Newman Club; Skull and Crescent .... MARTHA LAUDEMAN, Elwood . . A.B. History . . Alpha Chi Omega; Paddock Club; History Club; Y.W.C.A HENRY LEBIODA, Gary . . B.S. Medicine . . Phi Beta Pi ... . FRANCIS GAY LEE, Guion . . B.S. Education . . Pershing Rifles; Drill Team; History Club .... RUTH M. LEFFORGE, Wabash . . B.S. Education . . Vice President, Alpha Delta Pi; Girls ' Glee Club; F.T.A.; Y.W.C.A.; Education Club .... CHARLES LEGEMAN, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . President, Beta Theta Pi. Third Row JOHN LEININGER, Akron . . B.S. Business . . Sigma Nu; Alpha Kappa Psi; Y.M.C.A C. STEPHEN LEONARD, Hartford City . . LL.B. . . Phi Kappa Psi; President, Gamma Eta Gamma .... ALBERT E. LESSER, La Porte . . B.S. Education . . Scabbard and Blade; Education Club; Rifle and Pistol Team .... BEATRYCE LEWIS, Bloomington . . A.B. Spanish . . Alpha Kappa Alpha; Spanish Club .... MARTHA L. LEWIS, New Castle . . B.P.S.M. Vocal Emphasis . . Y.W.C.A.; W.A.A.; Pro-Music Club; Girls ' Glee Club; Kappa Phi ... . MARY JANE LEWIS, Indiana Harbor . . B.S. Education .... RICHARD LEWIS, Bloomington . . B.S. Business . . Kappa Sigma; Captain, Crack Drill Squad; Pershing Rifles; Varsity Rifle Team .... TED LEWIS, Beach Grove . . B.S. Business . . Phi Delta Theta; Scabbard and Blade. SVEA LINDQUIST JOSEPH DALE HARRY B. UTTELL LEON H. LITTLE, CARLOS LLABRES JOHN LLOYD ROBERT PAUL CECIL LIPPS JR. LLOYD LOCKWOOD HELEN LOVE HARVEY D. LOVETT VIRGINIA LUDWICK iikf DEDE LUNG WILLIAM LYON HUGH BEST LOUIS E. McBRIDE NORMA LEE McADAMS McCLINTOCK BILLIE LUCILLE ROBERT L McCLURE McCLURE ROBERTS. McCORMICK jack mccray bette mcdonald george d. Mcdonald richard leroy mary ina Mcdonald McElhinney 303 First Row JOHN PARKER MEISTER, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Scabbard and Blade; Alpha Phi Omega; Men ' s Glee Club; Insurance Club; Freshman Basketball .... MARJORIE LOUISE MELLEN, Springfield, Ohio . . A.B. Spanish . . Delta Delta Delta; Taps; Y.W.C.A.; W.A.A.; Girls ' Glee Club; Spanish Club .... BOB MELLEN, Bedford . . A.B. Government . . Phi Gamma Delta; Pi Sigma Alpha .... FERNANDO L. MENDEZ, South Bend . . A.B. Chemistry . . President, Delta Tau Delta .... EDWARD A. MERCHEN, Oldenburg . . B.S. Chemistry . . Newman Club .... RALPH W. MEYER, Ft. Wayne . . A.B. Economics . . Alpha Tau Omega .... MARY MICU, Garrett . . B.S. Home Economics .... ALLAN MIKOLA, Paterson, N.J. . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; Accounting Club. Second Row ALWYN ELIZABETH MILLER, East Chicago . . A.B. Spanish . . Delta Delta Delta; Alpha Lambda Delta; Mortar Board Recogni- tion; Y.W.C.A.; Spanish Club; Le Cercle Francois .... FLORENCE LEE MILLER, East Chicago . . A.B. Socio logy . . Sigma Delta Tau .... NATHAN J. MILLER, Bloomington . . A.B., Sociology . . Vice-President, Pi Lambda Phi; Alpha Kappa Delta .... MICKEY MILLER, Morgantown . . B.S. Business . . President, Delta Upsilon; Scabbard and Blade .... BETTY MILLER, Manilla . . B.S. Education . . Delta Delta Delta; Taps; Girls ' Glee Club; Classical Club; Y.W.C.A.; Eta Sigma Phi ... . VERGIL F. MIL- LER, Bloomington . . B.S. Business . . Delta Chi ... . MARY LOUISE MILLIS, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . Omicron Delta .... LEXIE MILLS, Bloomington . . B.S. Education . . Vice-President, Phi Epsilon Kappa; Freshman Basketball; Varsity Track. D © ROBERT MARY ELIZABETH BILLY A. McKEE JOSEPH HOMER A. DeVONE JANE MARGERY JEAN McFARLAND MclLVEEN McKINLEY McOMBER McQUEEN McWHINNEY MacDONALD LOUIS EDWIN MACKEY CHARLES MACKRES 1 ALEXANDER E. PAUL V. MAURICE M. MARY MANN MALEK MALICOTE MANALAN JOHN ALLEN MANNAN 304 BI JOHN P. MEISTER MARJORIE t. BOB MELLEN FERNANDO L. EDWARD A. RALPH W. MEYER MARY MICU ALLAN MIKOLA MELLEN MENDEZ MERCHEN ALWYN MILLER FLORENCE LEE MILLER NATHAN J. MICKEY MILLER BETTY MILLER VERGIL F. MILLER MARY LOUISE MILLER MILLIS ROBERT McFARLAND, Vincennes . . A.B. Government . . Sigma Nu . . . . MARY ELIZABETH MclLVEEN, Bloomington . . A.B. French . . Secretary, Alpha Omicron Pi; President, Pan-Hellenic Council; Le Cercle Francois; History Club; Y.W.C.A BILLY A. McKEE, Rochester . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; Accounting Club; Management Club .... JOSEPH McKINLEY, Delphi . . A.B. Chemistry . . Phi Chi; Marching Hundred; Der Deutsche Verein .... HOMER A. McOMBER, Hobart . . B.S. Business .... DEVONE McQUEEN, Flat Rock . . B.S. Education . . I.S.A.; W.A.A.; Kappa Phi; F.T.A.; Tennis Club .... JANE McWHINNEY, Kendallville . . A.B. French . . I.S.A.; Pi Lambda Theta; Alpha Lambda Delta; Le Cercle Francois .... MARGERY JEAN MacDONALD, Bedford . . B.S. Education . . I.S.A.; Education Club. Second Row LOUIS EDWIN MACKEY, Rockport . . B.S. Business .... DAVID A. MACKLIN, Decatur . . B.S. Business . . Kappa Sigma .... CHARLES MACKRES, Ft. Wayne . . LL.B ALEXANDER E. MALEK, Whiting . . A.B. Journalism . . I.S.A.; Sigma Delta Chi; Night Editor, Indiana Daily Student; Newman Club .... PAUL V. MALICOTE, Bedford . . B.S. Education .... MAURICE M. MANALAN, Gary . . A.B. Anatomy . . Skeleton Club .... MARY MANN, Indianapolis . . B.S. Education . . Mortar Board; Pleiades; A.W.S. Council; Pi Lambda Theta; Vice-President, Education Club; President, Alpha Lambda Delta; Y.W.C.A.; Collegiate Who ' s Who; Senior Invitations Committee .... JOHN ALLEN MANNAN, Lafayette . . B.S. Business . . Treasurer, Delta Sigma Pi; Accounting Club; Varsity Golf. Third Row JEFFREY MARK, Indianapolis . . A.B. Chemistry .... MILDRED MARY MARKS, Hammond . . B.S. Education . . I.S.A.; New- man Club .... MARY FRANCES MARONEY, San Antonio, Texas .... B.S. Education . . Alpha Lambda Delta; Mortar Board Recognition; University Chorus; Education Club; Y.W.C.A GLENN L. MARSHALL, Bloomington . . A.B. Anatomy . . Phi Kappa Psi; Der Deutsche Verein; Phi Beta Pi; Skeleton Club .... PHILIP GLENN MARTIN, Valparaiso . . B.S. Business . . Management Club. Fourth Row MERRITT MAUZY, New Paris . . B.S. Medicine .... JOHN MAYCOX, Cincinnati, Ohio . . A.B. Government . . Delta Tau Delta; Varsity Football .... EDITH LAVONE MEAL, Waldron . . B.S. Education . . Y.W.C.A.; Education Club; F.T.A.; Wes- ley Foundation; Kappa Phi ... . JOHN A. MECKLENBURG, Bloomington . . B.S. Education . . Varsity Football; F.T.A GEORGE ARTHUR MEIHAUS, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . Phi Delta Theta; Vice-President, Management Club. 305 HAROLD MOPPS MADONNA MORITZ REBECCA ANNE MORRIS RICHARD O. MORRIS WILLIAM MORRIS f HI $t$ ifl A MARGARET ALEXANDER F. MORRISON 1 -, ;:: :.,:«,- .,■.. ' ,■... MUIR DONNA MUMMERT MARIAN MYERS ROBERT NEELY First Row ELIZABETH NEFF, Ft. Wayne . . A.B. Government . . Chi Omega; Pi Sigma Alpha; Foulke Club; Le Cercle Francois; Coed Counsellor; Y.W.C.A RICHARD B. NEFF, Iowa City, Iowa . . B.S. Business . . Phi Gamma Delta; Sophomore Basketball Manager .... JAMES A. NESBIT, Greensburg . . B.S. Business . . Pershing Rifles; Management Club .... BEATRICE NESSON, Haverhill, Massachusetts . . A.B. Sociology . . Der Deutsche Verein; Hillel Foundation; Coed Counsellor .... ROBERT NEWCOMB, Hammond . . A.B. History . . Marching Hundred; Der Deutsche Verein .... ROY WOODFORD NEWMAN, Quincy . . B.S. Business . . Accounting Club .... DENNIS NICHOLAS, Rockville . . A.B. Chemistry . . Kappa Delta Rho; Theta Kappa Psi . . . . JAMES NICHOLAS, Bloomington, LL.B. Second Row PATT NICHOLS, Spencer . . B.S. Business . . President, Delta Gamma; Advertising Club; Omicron Delta .... JAMES E. NOLAND, Bloomington . . A.B. Government . . Phi Kappa Psi; Phi Eta Sigma; Law Club .... MARY ALICE NORWICH, Buffalo, New York . . B.S. Education .... HARRY W. O ' DELL, Farmsburg . . A.B. Chemistry . . Nu Sigma Nu . . . . MADYLON O ' DOWD, Monticello . . B.S. Education . . I.S.A.; W.A.A. Board; President, Hiking Club; Secretary, Modern Dance Club; Tennis Club; Oceanides; Riding Club; Coed Counsellor; Senior Peace-Pipe Committee .... MARIE PHYLLIS O ' DOWD, Mon- ticello . . B.S. Education . . I.S.A.; Secretary, W.A.A.; President, Oceanides; Newman Club .... ANN F. O ' NEAL, Loo- gootee . . B.S. Home Economics . . Newman Club; Home Economics Club .... JEAN ORDUNG, New Carlisle . . A.B. His- tory . . History Club; Euclidean Circle. 306 First Row JAYNE MILTEER, Gary . . B.S. Education . . Kappa Alpha Theta; Y.W.C.A RICHARD C. MINCZEWSKI, South Bend . . B.S. Medicine . . Theta Kappa Psi . . . . ROSEMARY MINER, Pendleton . . A.B. English . . Alpha Chi Omega; A.W.S. Council; Y.W.C.A.; Le Cercle Francois; History Club; English Club; Girls ' Glee Club .... WAYNE MINNICK, Hammond . . A.B. Eng- lish . . Varsity Debate; Flame Club; Tau Kappa Alpha; Der Deutsche Verein .... OLIVE MINNIEAR, Garrett . . B.S. Home Economics. Second Row MARY HELEN MITCHELL, South Bend . . A.B. Sociology . . Alpha Kappa Alpha; W.A.A WILLIAM DENTON MITCHELL, Windfall . . B.S. Business . . International Relations Club; President, Cosmopolitan Club; Insurance Club; Advertising Club; Men ' s Glee Club; Freshman Debate .... KENNETH MOELLER, Ft. Wayne . . B.S. Business . . President, Theta Chi; President, Sphinx Club; Secretary, Scabbard and Blade; Union Board; Blue Key; Crimson Stags; Senior Invitations Committee .... WILLIAM CHARLES MOORE, Bloomington . . J.D. . . Phi Beta Kappa; Tau Kappa Alpha; Phi Delta Phi; Editorial Board, Indiana Law Journal; William Lowe Bryan Scholarship .... WILLIAM L. MOORE, Jr., Indianapolis . . A.B. Chemistry. Third Row HAROLD MOPPS, Muncie . . B.S. Business . . Newman Club .... BETTY JANE MORAN, South Bend . . A.B. English . . Y.W. C.A. Cabinet; Mortar Board; Chairman, Senior Breakfast Committee .... RICHARD R. MORAN, Jr., South Bend . . B.S. Busi- ness . . Sigma Nu . . . . EVELYN MAE MORGAN, Indianapolis . . B.S. Education . . Sigma Kappa .... MADONNA MORITZ, Ft. Wayne . . B.S. Education . . Zeta Tau Alpha; Education Club; Newman Club; Girls ' Glee Club .... REBECCA ANNE MORRIS, Noblesville . . B.S. Business . . Kappa Kappa Gamma; Omicron Delta .... RICHARD O. MORRIS, Lebanon . . B.S. Business . . Beta Theta Pi; Senior Basketball Manager; Beta Gamma Sigma .... WILLIAM MORRIS, Anderson . . A.B. Chem- istry . . Delta Upsilon; 1940 Arbutus Staff; Alpha Chi Sigma; Sophomore Baseball Manager; Inter-Fraternity Council. Fourth Row MARGARET ANNE MORRISON, Kokomo . Y.W.C.A.; Jordan River Revue; Girls ' Glee ta; Editor-in-Chief, Indiana Daily Student; .... DONNA MUMMERT, Indianapolis . . ness . . Omicron Delta; Coed Counsellor; . . Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; Board of Standards Protestant Student Council; Vice-President, sellor; Camera Club .... ESTHER MAE MYERS, Mayfield, Kentucky . . Business . . Virginia . . B.S. Business. . A.B. French . . Delta Gamma; Le Cercle Francois; University Symphony Orchestra; Club .... ALEXANDER F. MUIR, Ellettsville . . A.B. Journalism . . Delta Tau Del- 1942 Arbutus Staff; President, Sigma Delta Chi; Dragon ' s Head; Board of Aeons B.S. Education . . R.N. Club .... JEAN CLARE MYERS, Shelbyville . . B.S. Busi- Newman Club; Girls ' Glee Club .... EDWINA K. MYERS, Muncie . . A.B. Sociology ; A.W.S. Council; President, Kappa Phi; Secretary, Alpha Kappa Delta; President, Sycamore Hall; English Club; Le Cercle Francois; Wesley Foundation; Coed Coun- MYERS, Noblesville . . A.B. History . . Coed Counsellor; History Club .... MARIAN Pi Beta Phi; Advertising Club; Omicron Delta .... ROBERT NEELY, Hinton, West PATT NICHOLS JAMES E. NOLAND MARY ALICE NORWICH HARRY W. O ' DELL MADYLON O ' DOWD MARIE PHYLLIS O ' DOWD ANN F. O ' NEAL JEAN ORDUNG 307 First Row JOANNA MAE PHILLIPPE, Indianapolis . . B.P.S.M. Instrumental Emphasis . . Sigma Kappa; University Symphony Orchestra; Choral Union; Pirates of Penzance ; The Gondoliers .... BETTY LOU PHILLIPS, Indianapolis . . B.S. Home Economics . . Zeta Tau Alpha; Home Economics Club .... JOHN F. PHILLIPS, Butlerville . . A.B. Chemistry . . Theta Kappa Psi . . . . ROBERT G. PHILLIPS, Gary . . B.S. Business . . Delta Tau Delta .... BILL PIERCE, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . Delta Tau Delta; University Radio; Advertising and Merchandising Club; Accounting Club; Y.M.C.A.; Omega Tau Alpha; Sophomore Basketball Manager. Second Row JO ANNE PIERPONT, Indianapolis . . A.B. History . .Pleiades; Tau Kappa Alpha; Vice-President, History Club; Mortar Board; Coed Sponsor, Pershing Rifles; Alpha Lambda Delta; Phi Beta Kappa; Senior Siwash Committee .... AGNES JULIA PILGER, St. Louis, Missouri . . B.S. Education .... JOE PINTER, East Toledo, Ohio . . B.S. Business . . Treasurer, Scabbard and Blade; President, Newman Club; Varsity Rifle Team; Pistol Team; Flame Club .... WILLIAM C. PITMAN, Bedford . . A.B. Chemistry . . Alpha Chi Sigma .... MARJORIE PITTMAN, Lebanon . . B.S. Education . . I.S.A.; Education Club; Classical Club; Y.W.C.A. Third Row LOIS PLEASANT, Merom . . A.B. Sociology .... SHIRLEY PLONER, Michigan City . . B.S. Business . . Delta Gamma; Omicron Delta .... MARY KATHRYN POE, Franklin . . A.B. Psychology . . I.S.A.; Vice-President, Protestant Student Council; Secre- tary, Westminster Inn ... . ROBERTA POLAND, Indianapolis . . B.S. Education . . Y.W.C.A.; Education Club .... JANICE LOUISE POPE, French Lick . . A.B. Journalism . . Kappa Kappa Gamma; Vice-President, Theta Sigma Phi; Indiana Daily Stu- dent Staff .... PHIL E. POPPLER, Grand Fork, North Dakota . . LL.B. . . Sigma Chi; Phi Delta Phi; Sigma Delta Chi; Phi Eta Sigma; Delta Sigma Rho; Blue Key .... VERNON I. PORTER, Burns City . . A.B. Botany .... DORIS POTTENGER, Indian- apolis . . B.S. Education . . Oceanides; W.A.A.; Physical Education Club for Women. Fourth Row JAMES W. POWERS, Ladoga . . B.S. Dentistry .... FRANCIS VINCENT PRENDERGAST, Chicago, Illinois . . B.S. Education .... ALBERT M. PRICE, Jr., Whiting . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; Accounting Club .... BETTY PRUITT, Bloomington . . A.B. Sociology . . Alpha Omicron Pi; Pan-Hellenic Council; Sociology Club; Spanish Club; Y.W.C.A.; W.A.A MADELYN L. PUGH, Indianapolis . . A.B. Journalism . . President, Kappa Kappa Gamma; President, Pleiades; Theta Sigma Phi; Mortar Board; Pan-Hellenic Council; Y.W.C.A. Council; Indiana Daily Student Staff; 1941 Arbutus Staff; State Fair Student Staff; Chairman, Senior Memorial Committee .... JANE PULLEY, Warren . . B.S. Education . . Pi Beta Phi; Y.W.C.A JOHN K. PURCELL, Sullivan . . LL.B. . Alpha Tau Omega; Phi Delta Phi ... . MARY FRANCIS QUALKENBUSH, Norton, Virginia . . B.S. Business. ARY LOUISE QUENTIN W. NORMA JOHN R. MICHAEL DAPHNE JEANETTE BETTY JANE OSBORNE OSBURN OVERBAY PAINTER PAKUCKO PALMER PASS PATTY MABLE LOUISE EMMA LUCY PHELPS PHILLIPP 308 LOIS PLEASANT SHIRLEY PLONER MARY KATHRYN POE ROBERTA POLAND JANICE LOUISE PHIL E. POPPLER VERNON I. POPE PORTER DORIS POTTENGER JAMES W. POWERS FRANCIS PRENDERGAST JOHN K. PURCELL MARY FRANCIS QUALKENBUSH First Row MARY LOUISE OSBORNE, Bloomington . . B.S. Business . . Newman Club; Omicron Delta .... QUENTIN W. OSBURN, Sun- man . . A.B. Chemistry . . Der Deutsche Verein .... NORMA OVERBAY, Indianapolis . . A.B. English . . Kappa Alpha Theta; Girls ' Glee Club; Le Cercle Francois; Y.W.C.A JOHN R. PAINTER, Alexandria . . B.S. Business . . Vice-Presi- dent, Sigma Chi; Delta Sigma Pi; Circulation Manager, 1942 Arbutus .... MICHAEL PAKUCKO, Chicago, Illinois . . B.S. Education . . Kappa Delta Rho ; President, Dolphin Club; Varsity Swimming .... DAPHNE ELIZABETH PALMER, Blooming- ton . . A.B. English . . Kappa Kappa Gamma; History Club; Der Deutsche Verein; Y.W.C.A JEANETTE FLORENCE PASS, Gary . . A.B. Music . . Sigma Alpha Iota; Pro-Music Club; Der Deutsche Verein; Oceanides .... BETTY JANE PATTY, Bloom- ington . . B.S. Home Economics. Second Row ROBERT PAVIS, Great Hills, Staten Island, New York . . B.S. Business . . Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Varsity Baseball; Freshman Basketball; I Men ' s Club; Newman Club .... HELEN PEACOCK, Mooresville . . A.B. English . . Secretary, Pi Lambda Theta; Kappa Phi; Secretary, Wesley Foundation; Der Deutsche Verein .... JOSEPH PEDICINI, Newark, New Jersey . . A.B. Chem- istry . . Phi Eta Sigma; Alpha Chi Sigma; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Le Cercle Francois; Junior Math Club; Newman Club .... REBA PENDRY, Colfax . . A.B. Home Economics . . Vice-President, Alpha Omicron Pi; Home Economics Club; Pleiades; Y.W. C.A.; W.A.A.; Der Deutsche Verein; Senior Breakfast Committee .... JEROME H. PETERS, Marysville . . B.S. Business . . Alpha Tau Omega; Senior Baseball Manager .... FRED G. PFROMMER, Hammond . . A.B. Government . . Kappa Delta Rho; Sphinx Club; Varsity Swimming; Dolphin Club .... MABLE LOUISE PHELPS, Bloomington . . A.B. History . . History Club .... EMMA LUCY PHILLIPP, Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas . . A.B. Government . . Mortar Board; Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; Board of Standards; Alpha Lambda Delta; President, Le Cercle Francois; Chairman, Student Government Committee; Senior Invitations Committee. 309 MARY FRANCIS REES KEITH C. REESE MARGUERITE LEE REEVES JAMES W. REGENFUSS CHARLES REICH JOHN JAMES FRANCES RENFRO EDWARD JOHN REINHARD REZNIK First Row FRANCES JOSEPHINE RICHARDS, Patricksburg . . B.S. Business . . Omicron Delta .... JAMES B. RICHARDS, Hillsboro . . B.S. Education . . Management Club; Insurance Club; Pershing Rifles; Crack Drill Squad .... SHIELDS RICHARDSON, Indianapolis, . . B.S. Education . . Y.M.C.A.; Le Cercle Francois .... WILLIAM J. RICHMOND, Gary . . B.S. Education .... ADDISON E. RIEPE, Evansville . . B.S. Education . . Advertising Club .... EUGENE SYMONS RIFNER, Spiceland . . A.B. Chemistry . . Theta Kappa Psi . . . . PEG RIGGS, Princeton . . A.B. English . . Y. W.C.A.; Concert Choir; Choral Union .... PAUL RILEY, Jackson- ville, Florida . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; Scabbard and Blade; Management Club; Varsity Track. Second Row JOHN W. RIPLEY, Milford . . A.B. Chemistry . . Junior Football Manager .... ANDREW WILLIAM ROBB, South Bend . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; Accounting Club; Management Club; Y.M.C.A ROBERT G. ROBB, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . Vice-President, Alpha Tau Omega; Delta Sigma Pi; Management Club .... WALTER ROBBINS, Jr., West Baden Springs . . B.S. Business . . Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Alpha Kappa Psi; Blue Key; Board of Directors, Collegiate Chamber of Commerce; Senior Memorial Committee .... RUTH ROBERTS, Ft. Branch . . B.S. Business . . Y.W.C.A.; Education Club; Coed Counsellor .... CAROLYN ROBERTSON, Brownstown . . A.B. Economics . . Pi Beta Phi; Y.W.C.A.; Home Economics Club .... JANICE ROBEY, Indianapolis . . B.S. Education . . Alpha Delta Pi; Wesley Foundation Council; Kappa Phi Cabinet; W.A.A.; Coed Counsellor .... FRANK ROBINSON, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business. Third Row LLOYD T. ROBINSON, Bloomington . . B.S. Business . . Y.M.C.A WILLIAM P. ROBINSON, Hammond . . A.B. Economics . . Acacia; Varsity Debate; Tau Kappa Alpha; Senior Peace-Pipe Committee .... ARTHUR EUGENE RODENBERGER, Frank- fort . . B.S. Business . . Acacia; Scabbard and Blade; Inter-Fraternity Council; Alpha Kappa Psi; Skull and Crescent; Account- ing Club .... NORA ROE, Oaktown . . B.S. Home Economics . . Home Economics Club .... KENNETH ROHDE, Rochester, Minnesota . . A.B. Psychology. Fourth Row ORVILLE G. ROLLE, English . . B.S. Education . . I.S.A.; Classical Club; Eta Sigma Phi; Education Club; Cosmopolitan Club .... TRUMAN E. ROSE, Glen View, Illinois . . B.S. Business . . Phi Eta Sigma; Cabaret Show .... LELA JANE ROSS, Bloom- ington . . A.B. English . . Kappa Alpha Theta; Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; Taps; Coed Counselling Board; Der Deutsche Verein; Uni- versity Theatre; Vice-President, Jackson Club; Editor, Pan-Hellenic Handbook; Senior Breakfast Committee .... TREVA ROUSH, Morgantown . . B.S. Home Economics . . I.S.A.; Home Economics Club; Vice-President, Westminster Inn .... BETTY JEAN ROWE, Milwaukee, Wisconsin . . A.B. Sociology . . President, Chi Omega; Board of Standards; Vice-President, Y.W. C.A.; Pleiades; Coed Counsellor. 310 First Row KARL G. RAHDERT, Ft. Wayne . . B.S. Business . . President, I.S.A.; Treasurer, Senior Class; Board of Directors, Collegiate Chamber of Commerce; Vice-President, Y.M.C.A.; Board of Aeons; Flame Club; Delta Sigma Pi; Beta Gamma Sigma; Crim- son Stags; Vice-President, Blue Key .... BARBARA HOKE RANG, Washington . . A.B. French . . Kappa Alpha Theta; Le Cercle Francois; Pi Lambda Theta .... GERSTEN RAPPAPORT, Brooklyn, New York . . A.B. History . . Pi Lambda Phi; His- tory Club; Indiana Daily Student Staff .... RUSSELL E. RATCLIFF, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . Phi Eta Sigma; Vice-Presi- dent, Insurance Club .... JOHN REARICK, Walkerton . . A.B. Government . . Le Cercle Francois; Law Club .... JEAN ELLEN REDMAN, Garrett . . B.S. Home Economics . . University Theatre; Home Economics Club; Y.W.C.A EDWARD K. REED, Indianapolis . . B.S. Education .... RITA M. REEL, Vincennes . . B.S. Education . . Alpha Delta Pi; Le Cercle Francois; F.T.A.; Y.W.C.A. Second Row MARY FRANCES REES, La Porte . . A.B. Sociology . . Kappa Alpha Theta; President, A.W.S.; Vice-President, Senior Class; Phi Beta Kappa; Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; Board of Standards; Alpha Lambda Delta; Alpha Kappa Delta; Mortar Board; Pleiades; Le Cercle Francois; English Club; W.A.A KEITH C. REESE, Indianapolis . . A.B. Government . . Vice-President, Alpha Tau Omega; Spanish Club; Y.M.C.A MARGUERITE LEE REEVES, Greencastle . . A.B. Fine Arts . . Taps; Y.W.C.A JAMES W. REGENFUSS, Milwaukee, Wisconsin . . B.S. Education . . Phi Epsilon Kappa .... CHARLES STEPHEN REICH, Charlestown . . B.S. Business . . Accounting Club .... JOHN JAMES REINHARD, Jr., Washington, D.C. . . A.B. Chemistry . . Phi Gamma Delta; Phi Eta Sigma; Der Deutsche Verein; Nu Sigma Nu ; Phi Beta Kappa .... FRANCES RENFRO, Spartan- burg, South Carolina . . B.S. Education . . Pi Beta Phi; History Club; Bored Walk Staff; University Theatre .... EDWARD JOHN REZNIK, La Porte . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; Advertising Club; Newman Club; Y.M.C.A. FRANCES JAMES B. SHIELDS WILLIAM J. ADDISON E. EUGENE PEG RIGGS PAUL RILEY RICHARDS RICHARDS RICHARDSON RICHMOND RIEPE RIFNER ORVILLE G. ROLLE TRUMAN E ROSE 311 First Row JOHN FRED SELZER, Chrisney . . B.S. Business . . Phi Eta Sigma; Flame Club .... CHARLES WILLIAM SEMBOWER, Bloom- ington . . A.B. Journalism . . Beta Theta Pi; Night Editor, Indiana Daily Student; Sigma Delta Chi .... WILLIAM JOHN SHAKER, Terre Haute . . B.S. Business . . Accounting Club; Alpha Phi Omega; Phi Eta Sigma; Jackson Club .... ALBERTA SHALANSKY, Indianapolis . . B.S. Education . . Sigma Delta Tau; Hillel Senior Council; English Club; Education Club .... ISADORE SHAPIRO, Mishawaka . . A.B. Sociology . . Pi Lambda Phi; Der Deutsche Verein; Student Government Committee; Freshman Debate; Hillel Executive Council .... WILLIAM SHEEDY, Manilla . . A.B. Geology . . Sigma Gamma Epsilon; Rifle Team; Pistol Team .... DORIS SHEELER, South Bend . . B.S. Business .... RUSSELL SHOUMAKER, Huntington . . A.B. His- tory . . History Club. Second Row RICHARD T. SHULTZ, Ft. Wayne . . B.S. Business . . America! Chemical Society; Red Book Staff; Y.M.C.A CHARLES SHUMAKER, Dunkirk . . B.S. Education . . Lambda Chi Alpha; I Men ' s Club; Varsity Baseball .... EARL WINFIELD SIDEBOTTOM, Rushville . . B.S. Medicine . . Phi Rho Sigma; Skeleton Club .... EDGAR SIEGEL, Converse . . B.S. Business . . Sigma Alpha Mu; Beta Gamma Sigma; Board of Aeons; Junior Football Manager; Skull and Crescent; Phi Eta Sigma .... MARJORIE SIGLER, Bloomington . . A.B. English . . Classical Club; Eta Sigma Phi ... . PATRICIA JANE SIGLER, Cloverdale . . A.B. Sociology . . Delta Delta Delta; Secretary, Jackson Club; Riding Club; Coed Counsellor .... RIVIAN J. SIMON, South Bend . . B.S. Education . . I.S.A RALPH SINGER, Indianapolis . . A.B. Chemistry . . Sigma Chi; Sophomore Foot- ball Manager; Sophomore Baseball Manager. Third Row PENN GASKELL SKILLERN, South Bend . . B.S. Medicine . . Sigma Alpha Epsilon .... AMELIA E. SLAMKOWSKI, East Chicago . . B.P.S.M. Instru mental Emphasis .... DOROTHY ALICE SLOAN, Bloomington . . A.B. Psychology .... EVELYN SLUNG, Seymour . . A.B. Sociology . . Secretary, Sigma Delta Tau; HJIel Senior Council; Le Cercle Francais; Coed Counsellor; Junior Math Club .... BETTY ANNE SMALL, Vincennes . . A.B. English . . Delta Delta Delta; Coed Counsellor; Y.W.C.A.; Le Cercle Francais; University Theatre; Jordan River Revue; Riding Club .... DOLORES SMALL, Hobart . . A.B. Journalism . . Alpha Omicron Pi; Indiana Daily Student Staff; Y.W.C.A.; Theta Sigma Phi ... . CHARLES S. SMITH, Cumberland . . B.S. Business . . Lambda Chi Alpha; Delta Sigma Pi; Vice-President, Management Club; Y.M.C.A GEORGE HENRY SMITH, Hammond . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; Management Club. BETTY ROWEN JUNE ROWLAND DE WAYNE JOHN MILTON BEN RUSSELL MARY DULIN ROBERT J. MARVIN E. ROYALTY RUDDELL RUSSELL SABIN SABLOSKY BOOTH SCHOLL 312 JOHN FRED SEIZER CHARLES WM. WILLIAM JOHN ALBERTA ISADORE WILLIAM SEMBOWER SHAKER SHALANSKY SHAPIRO SHEEDY DORIS SHEELER RUSSELL SHOUMAKER RICHARD T. CHARLES EARL WINFIELD EDGAR SIEGEL SHULTZ SHUMAKER SIDEBOTTOM MARJORIE SIGLER PATRICIA JANE RIVIAN J. SIMON . RALPH SINGER SIGLER PENN GASKELL AMELIA E. DOROTHY ALICE EVELYN SLUNG BETTY ANNE DOLORES SMALL CHARLES S. GEORGE HENRY SKILLERN SLAMKOWSKI SLOAN SMALL SMITH SMITH First Row BETTY ROWEN, Rensselaer . . B.S. Education . . W.A.A JUNE ROWLAND, South Bend . . A.B. Journalism . . I.S.A.; Theta Sigma Phi; Coed Counsellor; Associate Editor, Freshman Handbook; Indiana Daily Student Staff; Der Deutsche Verein; Associate Editor, Coed Reporter; Kappa Phi; W.A.A. ; Senior Peace-Pipe Committee . . . . DE WAYNE ROYALTY, Oakland City . . B.S. Business . . Pershing Rifles; Crack Drill Squad; Management Club .... JOHN MILTON RUDDELL, Anderson . . A.B. Chemistry . . American Chemical Society .... BEN RUSSELL, Indianapolis . . A.B. Government . . Foulke Club; Phi Sigma Alpha .... MARY DULIN RUSSELL, Paris, Illinois . . A.B. History . . Delta Delta Delta; Y.W.C.A.; History Club .... ROBERT J. SABIN, Dana . . A.B. Economics . . Board of Directors; I.S.A.; Y.M.C.A. Cabinet; Alpha Phi Omega; Flame Club; Sigma Epsilon Theta .... MARVIN E. SABLOSKY, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . Treasurer, Sigma Alpha Mu; Senior Track Manager; Skull and Crescent. Second Row HARRY J. SACKS, East Chicago . . B.S. Medicine .... MARY SAILORS, South Bend . . B.S. Business . . Kappa Kappa Gam- ma; Omicron Delta; Y.W.C.A.; Coed Counsellor .... VIRGIL W. SAMMS, Jr., Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . Sigma Nu . . . . BETTY JANE SAVESKY, Marion . . A.B. Journalism . . Sigma Delta Tau; Alpha Lambda Delta; Le Cercle Francois; Mortar Board Recognition; Bored Walk Staff; Secretary, Theta Sigma Phi; Indiana Daily Student Staff; Hi I le I Foundation; Tennis Club; Coed Counsellor; Senior Tree-planting Committee .... WILLIAM J. SCHECTER, Indianapolis . . B.S. Medicine . . Skeleton Club .... ELNORA SCHMADEL, Evansville . . A.B. Sociology .... MARY SUSAN SCHMALZ, Bloomington . . A.B. English . . Delta Gamma; Y.W.C.A.; Coed Counsellor .... ROBERT J. SCHMOLL, Ft. Wayne . . A.B. Anatomy . . Theta Kappa Psi. Third Row BOOTH SCHOLL, Speedway City . . B.S. Business . . Acacia .... VERGIL SCHULTZ, Elberfeld . . B.S. Education .... STANLEY SCHWARTZ, Brooklyn, New York . . A.B. Chemistry . . Pi Lambda Phi; Junior Wrestling Manager .... PAUL WILLIAM SCHWEHN, Ft. Wayne . . B.S. Business . . Indiana Daily Student Staff; Delta Sigma Pi; Varsity Debate; Sigma Delta Chi; Tau Kappa Alpha; Flame Club; Omega Tau Alpha .... VIRGINIA SCUDDER, Edwardsport . . A.B. Sociology . . I.S.A.; Y.W. C.A MADELINE SCULLY, Gary . . B.S. Education . . Pi Beta Phi; Pleiades; Modern Dance Club; R.O.T.C. Sponsor; Y.W. C.A VIDA SEAMAN, Taylorville, Illinois . . A.B. Home Economics . . Delta Delta Delta .... FLOYD SELZER, Chrisney . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A. 313 KENNETH SMITH LEO MAX SMITH JOYCE SMITH R.B.SMITH ROGER C.SMITH MARIA SOBRINO CAROLYN SOUTH CLAUDE PAULSPLITTORFF JOHN C. SPILMAN SPRINGER JOHN E. SPRINGER LAURA STAFFORD GAYLORD WILLIAM O. MARTHA STALTER STARKS STEDMAN ROBERT ELLEN TAYLOR TAYLOR 314 First Row GLEN E. SMITH, Versailles . . B.S. Business . . Sigma Pi; Sphinx Club; Editor, Red Book; Y.M.C.A.; Skull and Crescent; Scab- bard and Blade; Inter-Fraternity Council; Assistant Business Manager, University Theatre; Crimson Stags; Jackson Club; Senior Tree-Planting Committee .... GLEN G. SMITH, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . Acacia; Sigma Epsilon Theta; Accounting Club; Y.M.C.A.; University Symphony Orchestra .... JAMES E. SMITH, Rochester . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A JOHN LYNN SMITH, Floyds Knobs . . A.B. Astronomy . . I.S.A. Second Row KENNETH SMITH, Piqua, Ohio . . B.S. Education . . Theta Chi; I Men ' s Club; Varsity Football .... LEO MAX SMITH, Port- land . . A.B. Chemistry . . Phi Rho Sigma; Phi Eta Sigma .... JOYCE SMITH, Valparaiso . . B.S. Education . . President, Phi Mu ; W.A.A.; Coed Counsellor; Y.W.C.A R. B. SMITH, Ft. Wayne . . B.S. Medicine . . Delta Chi; Phi Chi; Skull and Crescent. Third Row ROGER C. SMITH, New Haven . . B.S. Medicine . . Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Theta Kappa Psi; Skeleton Club .... MARIA SOBRINO, Arecibo, Puerto Rico . . A.B. French . . Cosmopolitan Club; Le Cercle Francois; Spanish Club .... CAROLYN SOUTH, Bloomington . . A.B. Home Economics . . Home Economics Club; Cosmopolitan Club; Y.W.C.A DORIS LEE SPAHR, Gary . . A.B. Chemistry . . Vice-President, lota Sigma Pi ... . ROBERT K. SPANGLER, Albion . . B.S. Business .... GLADYS SPELL, Greenfield . . B.S. Education . . Y.W.C.A HELEN SPENCER, Frankfort . . A.B. Zoology . . Alpha Omicron Pi; Y.W.C.A JOHN B. SPENCER, Jr., Ft. Wayne . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A. Fourth Row CLAUDE MENDENHALL SPILMAN, Jr., Rushville . . A.B. Government . . Phi Delta Theta; 1940 Arbutus Staff; Le Cercle Fran- cois; Pershing Rifles .... PAUL W. SPLITTORFF, Evansville . . B.S. Business . . Vice-President, Delta Upsilon; Sphinx Club; In- surance Club; Y.M.C.A JOHN C. SPRINGER, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . Acacia; Advertising Club .... JOHN E. SPRINGER, Kokomo . . B.S. Business . . Treasurer, Phi Kappa Psi; Phi Eta Sigma; President, Blue Key; Skull and Crescent; Junior Basketball Manager; Board of Aeons .... LAURA STAFFORD, Bloomington . . B.S. Home Economics . . Home Eco- nomics Club; Coed Counsellor .... GAYLORD STALTER, Ft. Wayne . . A.B. Chemistry . . Sigma Chi ... . WILLIAM O. STARKS, Indianapolis . . B.S. Medicine . . Nu Sigma Nu . . . . MARTHA STEDMAN, Aurora . . B.S. Dietetics . . Zeta Tau Al- pha; W.A.A. Board; Home Economics Club. Fifth Row CHARLES STEELE, Chicago, Illinois . . B.S. Business . . Apha Tau Omega .... VIRGINIA STEVENS, Mishawaka . . A.B. Psy- chology . . Alpha Chi Omega; Y.W.C.A.; Le Cercle Francois .... JANE STINGLE, Ashley . . B.S. Home Economics . . Alpha Chi Omega; Y.W.C.A.; Home Economics Club .... ORA GLENN ST. MYER, Anderson . . B.S. Education . . Phi Eta Sigma; Le Cercle Francois; Der Deutsche Verein; Delta Phi Alpha; Y.M.C.A BETTY STOWE, Hastings on Hudson, New York . . A.B. History . . Delta Gamma; History Club .... JEANETTE STRAUB, Ft. Wayne . . B.S. Education . . Kappa Delta; Eu- clidean Circle; American Chemical Society; History Club; F.T.A ROBERT STRAWBRIDGE, Ft. Wayne . . B.S. Business . . Delta Upsilon; Freshman Basketball; Delta Sigma Pi; Y.M.C.A CHARLES L. STRONG, Bicknell . . B.S. Business . . Accounting Club. Sixth Row ELOISE STUMP, Richmond . . A.B. French . . Delta Gamma; Pleiades .... HAROLD D. STUMP, Auburn . . LL.B. . . Phi Delta Phi ... . MERLIN SUMMERS, North Liberty . . B.S. Business . . Theta Chi ... . CH ARLES H. SUTTON, Syracuse, New York . . B.S. Education . . Phi Epsilon Kappa .... EDWARD J. SWETS, Hammond . . A.B. Chemistry . . Kappa Delta Rho; Phi Chi .... PIERRE C. TALBERT, Auburn . . A.B. Chemistry . . I.S.A. Council; Theta Kappa Psi; Der Deutsche Verein; Flame Club; Freshman Football; Phi Eta Sigma .... ROBERT GOODWIN TAYLOR, Sullivan . . LL.B. . . Alpha Tau Omega; Phi Delta Phi; Law Club .... ELLEN TAYLOR, Honolulu, Hawaii . . A.B. Psychology . . President, Alpha Delta Pi; Treasurer, Pan- Hellenic Council; Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; Le Cercle Francois. 315 First Row PAULINE TAYLOR, Columbus . . B.S. Business . . Alpha Chi Omega; Y.W.C.A.; Cabaret Show; Jordan River Revue; R.O.T.C. Sponsor; Pleiades .... MARY JO TENNELL, Bloomington . . B.S. Business . . Alpha Delta Pi; Omicron Delta .... HELEN THIEME, Ft. Wayne . . B.S. Education . . President, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Secretary, Pan-Hellenic Council; A.W.S. Coun- cil ... . CANDY THOMPSON, Evansville . . B.S. Education . . President, Alpha Chi Omega; Secretary, Pan-Hellenic Council. Second Row MADELINE M. THOMPSON, Star City . . B.S. Home Economics . . Home Economics Club; Education Club .... BETTY THOMSON, Columbia City . . B.S. Education . . Pi Lambda Theta; Education Club; Y.W.C.A F. MILLER THORNBURG, Indianapolis . . A.B. Chemistry . . Theta Kappa Psi . . . . BETTE JANE THRASHER, Bloomington . . B.S. Business. Third Row MARTHA JEAN TIERNAN, Richmond . . B.S. Education . . Alpha Omicron Pi; Board of Standards; Newman Club; F.T.A.; Y.W.C.A SIMON SIDNEY TOBIAN, La Porte . . B.S. Business . . Insurance Club .... MARGARET TORPHY, Bloom- ington . . B.S. Business . . Pi Beta Phi; Omicron Delta; Y.W.C.A.; Chi Gamma; Coed Counsellor .... WILLIAM TORPHY, Bed- ford . . B.S. Education . . Acacia; Scabbard and Blade; Varsity Basketball; Skull and Crescent; I Men ' s Club .... JERRY W. TORRANCE, Jr., Marion . . LL.B. . . Phi Gamma Delta; Gamma Eta Gamma; Delta Sigma Pi; Alpha Phi Omega .... VIRGINIA O. TOWNSEND, Hagerstown . . B.S. Business . . Omicron Delta; Alpha Lambda Delta .... ALLEN J. TREMPER, Ft. Wayne . . A.B. English . . Flame Club; English Club; Le Cercle Francois .... JIM TRIMBLE, McKeesport, Pennsylvania . . B.S. Education . . Delta Chi; I Men ' s Club; Varsity Wrestling; Varsity Football; Sphinx Club; Jordan River Revue; Men ' s Glee Club. Fourth Row PHILIP TROCKMAN, Evansville . . B.S. Business . . President, Sigma Alpha Mu; Phi Eta Sigma .... SHERMAN B. TROTTER, Portland . . A.B. Chemistry . . Theta Kappa Psi ... . JOE TUCHMAN, Indianapolis . . A.B. Anatomy . . Sigma Alpha Mu; Skeleton Club .... BETTY TUCK, Louisville, Kentucky . . A.B. Sociology . . Vice-President, Delta Delta Delta; W.A.A.; Coed Counsellor; Bored Walk Staff; Pleiades; University Theatre; Jordan River Revue .... MERRILL G. TUCKER, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . Alpha Kappa Psi; Accounting Club .... COLA ANNETTA TURNER, East Chicago . . A.B. Sociology . . Sigma Gamma Rho; Y.W.C.A JACK TURNER, Crown Point . . B.S. Business . . Acacia .... A. LEE TYLER, Rockville . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A. Council; Chi Gamma; Omicron Delta; Advertising Club. Fifth Row N. JANE TYNER, Goldsmith . . B.S. Education . . I.S.A.; President, Beech Hall; F.T.A URBAN LOUIS UEBELHOER, Hun- tingburg . . B.S. Business . . Alpha Kappa Psi; Accounting Club; Board of Aeons; Flame Club .... ARTHUR E. VAN ARSDEL, Valparaiso . . B.S. Business . . Indiana Daily Student Staff .... ELIZABETH VANDERVEER, Milford . . A.B. English . . Le Cercle Francois .... MARGARET VANDERVEER, Milford . . A.B. French . . Le Cercle Francois; W.A.A MYRON JAMES VAN DORN, Indianapolis . . A.B. Chemistry . . Phi Beta Pi ... . MARY VAN DREW, Ft. Wayne . . B.S. Education . . Zeta Tau Alpha; Education Club; Newman Club .... NANCY VAN MATRE, Indianapolis . . A.B. French . . Zeta Tau Alpha; W.A.A. Board; Der Deutsche Verein; Le Cercle Francois; Classical Club; Y.W.C.A. Sixth Row ANNA M. VARGA, Ft. Wayne . . A.B. Sociology . . Alpha Kappa Delta .... ANNABELLE VARGYAS, South Bend . . B.S. Education . . R.N. Club; Newman Club .... GEORGE FORD VAUGHT, Bedford . . B.P.S.M. Instrumental Emphasis . . Kappa Kappa Psi; Pro-Music Club; Chairman, Music School Student Council; Marching Hundred; University Orchestra .... JOAN VEIT, Union City . . A.B. English . . Vice-President, Alpha Chi Omega; President, Mortar Board; Pleiades; Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; President, Summer A.W.S.; Le Cercle Francois; 1941 Arbutus Staff; Board of Standards; English Club; Coed Coun- sellor; Senior Invitations Committee .... MILLIE COX VICKERY, Sheridan . . B.S. Home Economics . . Delta Delta Delta; Mortar Board; Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; Home Economics Club; Coed Counsellor .... JOHN VISHER, Evansville . . A.B. Chemistry . . Sigma Nu; Union Board .... BETTYE VOGEL, Evansville . . B.S. Education . . Girls ' Glee Club; Jordan River Revue; Choral Union; Y.W.C.A.; Education Club .... RICHARD VOLLRATH, Indianapolis . . B.S. Business . . Gamma Delta; Insurance Club; Rifle Club; Scabbard and Blade; Advertising Club. 316 PHILIP TROCKMAN MERRILL G. TUCKER COLA ANNETTA JACK TURNER TURNER N. JANETYNER URBAN LOUIS ARTHUR E. VAN ELIZABETH UEBELHOER ARSDEL VANDERVEER ft 91 _ I A. LEE TYLER MARGARET MYRON JAMES MARY VAN DREW NANCY VAN VANDERVEER VAN DORN MATRE ANNA M. VARGA ANNABELLE VARGYAS GEORGE FORD VAUGHT 317 LLOYD C. ELFRIEDES. WAMPLER WANDREY ROBERT R. MARY AGNES M. A. WEIKART MARY MARIAN ' CHARLES WEBER WEDDELL WE1NLAND WELBORN WELLS EUGENE GEORGE WHITE LEONARD WHITE SHIRLEY WHITESELL JOHN S. WHITFIELD JOHN L. JUNE WHITMAN CLIFF WIETHOFF JOHN D. WHITINGER WIDAMAN First Row HOWARD S. WILCOX, Indianapolis . . A.B. Journalism . . President, Alpha Tau Omega; Managing Editor, Indiana Daily Student; Vice-President, Sigma Delta Chi; Sphinx Club; Scabbard and Blade; President, Skull and Crescent; Pershing Rifles; Senior Tree-Planting Committee .... BETTY WILDERMAN, Princeton . . A.B. Sociology . . Le Cercle Francois; Coed Coun- sellor; Y.W.C.A GILBERT M. WILHELMUS, Newburgh . . A.B. Chemistry . . Delta Tau Delta; Der Deutsche Verein .... ROSALYN WILK, Gary . . A.B. Sociology .... EDWARD G. WILLIAMS, Knightstown . . B.S. Business . . Phi Delta Theta; Delta Sigma Pi ... . BEN WILSON, Bloomington . . A.B. Anatomy and Physiology . . Phi Kappa Psi; Nu Sigma Nu; Presi- dent, Skeleton Club; Varsity Wrestling .... DAMA WILSON, Roachdale . . B.S. Chemistry . . W.A.A.; Home Economics Club; Education Club .... ROBERT J. WILSON, Omaha, Nebraska . . B.S. Business . . Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Marching Hun- dred; Treasurer, Kappa Kappa Psi; Scabbard and Blade; Pershing Rifles; Captain, Crack Drill Squad; Captain, Pistol Team; Alpha Phi Omega; Y.M.C.A. Second Row BERNARD MARK WINNER, Chicago, Illinois . . A.B. Chemistry . . Der Deutsche Verein .... ROBERT L. WINSLOW, Bloom- ington . . B.S. Chemistry . . Flame Club; Kappa Kappa Ps i; Y.M.C.A.; Marching Hundred .... JANE E. WINTERS, Indian- apolis . . A.B. English . . Kappa Alpha Theta; History Club; Girls ' Glee Club; Y.W.C.A JOAN WINTERS, Atlanta, Georgia . . A.B. Sociology . . Y.W.C.A.; Newman Club .... REX WISEHEART, Anderson . . B.S. Business . . Phi Kappa Psi; YM.C.A PAUL E. WISENBAUGH, North Liberty . . A.B. Chemistry . . Phi Chi; Der Deutsche Verein; Phi Eta Sigma .... ROBERT L. WITHAM, Indianapolis . . B.S. Medicine . . Alpha Tau Omega; Phi Eta Sigma; Nu Sigma Nu; 1940 Arbutus Staff; Freshman Football .... GEORGE WOLF, Peru . . A.B. Botany . . Alpha Phi Omega. Third Row FREDA WOLFE, Rossville . . A.B. English .... DOROTHY LOUISE WOLLET, Beverly Shores . . A.B. French . . Der Deutsche Verein; Secretary, Le Cercle Francois; Girls ' Glee Club .... JAMES B. WOOD, Terre Haute . . B.S. Business . . Vice-Presi- dent, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Blue Key; Captain, Varsity Tennis; Bored Walk Staff; I Men ' s Club .... WILBUR F. WOOD, Gary . . B.S. Business .... PAUL T. WORSTER, Connersville . . B.S. Dentistry . . I.S.A.; Y.M.C.A HELEN WOYTOVICH, Gary . . B.S. Education . . W.A.A.; Girls ' Glee Club; Secretary, Kappa Phi; Secretary, F.T.A.; Education Club .... JOHN A. WRIGHT, Rensselaer . . A.B. Journalism . . Phi Delta Theta; Phi Eta Sigma; Sigma Delta Chi; Indiana Daily Student Staff .... WILLIAM T. WRIGHT, Elkhart . . B.S. Business . . Treasurer, Delta Upsilon; Accounting Club; Scabbard and Blade. 318 First Row LLOYD C. WAMPLER, Spencer . . A.B. Government . . Law Club .... ELFRIEDE S. WANDREY, Buffalo, New York . . B.S. Education . . Cosmopolitan Club; Oceanides; W.A.A ROBERT R. WEBER, South Bend . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; Var- sity Tennis; I Men ' s Club .... MARY AGNES WEDDEL, Bloomington . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; Omicron Delta; Education Club; F.T.A M. A. WEIKART, Ft. Wayne . . LL.B. . . Phi Kappa .... MARY WEINLAND, Hope . . A.B. Latin . . I.S.A.; President, W.A.A. ; Eta Sigma Phi; Pi Lambda Theta; Vice-President, Mortar Board; Alpha Lambda Delta; Coed Counsellor .... MARIAN WELBORN, Terre Haute . . A.B. Home Economics . . Sigma Kappa .... CHARLES R. WELLS, Columbus . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; Scabbard and Blade. Second Row IMELDA WELSCH, Ft. Wayne . . B.S. Education . . Chi Omega; Education Club; Y.W.C.A.; Newman Club .... MARGARET WELSH, Vincennes . . A.B. English . . President, Pi Beta Phi; Y.W.C.A.; 1940 Arbutus Staff; Pan-Hellenic Council; Jordan River Revue .... BOB WENDELN, Cincinnati, Ohio . . B.S. Education . . Phi Epsilon Kappa .... CHARLES A. WESSELMAN, Evansville . . B.S. Chemistry . . Alpha Chi Sigma .... HARRY WESSELMAN, Evansville . . B.S. Business . . Flame Club .... GEORGE S. WESTFALL, Goshen . . B.S. Medicine . . Phi Chi; Skeleton Club; Marching Hundred; Kappa Kappa Psi; Der Deutsche Verein .... DONALD C. WHARTON, Ft. Wayne . . B.S. Medicine . . Phi Rho Sigma; Newman Club .... EDITH WHEELER, Indianapolis . . A.B. Home Economics . . I.S.A.; W.A.A.; Home Economics Club; Y.W.C.A. Third Row EUGENE GEORGE WHITE, South Bend . . B.S. Education . . Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Sphinx Club; Varsity Football; I Men ' s Club .... LEONARD FRANKLIN WHITE, Mishawaka . . B.S. Education . . Pershing Rifles; History Club; F.T.A SHIRLEY WHITESELL, Oxford . . B.P.S.M. Vocal Emphasis . . Pro-Music Club; Education Club .... JOHN S. WHITFIELD, Jr., Indian- apolis . . B.S. Education . . Delta Upsilon; Finance Club .... JOHN L. WHITINGER, Indianapolis . . A.B. Government . . Rifle Team; Law Club; Sigma Epsilon Theta .... JUNE WHITMAN, Chicago, Illinois . . A.B. Spanish .... CLIFF WIETHOFF, Seymour . . A.B. Anatomy . . Beta Theta Pi; Nu Sigma Nu . . . . JOHN D. WIDAMAN, Warsaw . . LL.B. . . Beta Theta Pi; Phi Delta Phi; President, Law Club. BERNARD MARK WINNER BEN WILSON DAMA WILSON v dfc% JANE E. WINTERS JOAN WINTERS REX WISEHEART PAUL E. WISENBAUGH FREDA WOLFE HELEN JOHN A. WRIGHT WILLIAM T. WOYTOVICH WRIGHT 319 First Row CHARLES R. WADE, Frankfort . . A.B. Journalism . . Sigma Delta Chi; Folio Staff; Indiana Daily Student Staff; Marching Hundred; Le Cercle Francois . . . . W. RICHARD WAGGONER, Rushville . . B.P.S.M. Instrumental Emphasis . . President, Phi Delta Theta; Skull and Crescent; Kappa Kappa Psi; University Symphony Orchestra; Marching Hundred .... ROBERT E. WALDA, Ft. Wayne . . B.S. Business . . Delta Upsilon; Delta Sigma Pi; Management Club .... J. JEWEL WALTERS, Car- lisle . . B.S. Business . . I.S.A.; Omicron Delta; Coed Counsellor .... CHARLES EDWARD WALK, New Salisbury . . B.S. Busi- ness . . I.S.A DONALD LEO WALKER, Loogootee . . B.S. Business .... EMILY WALKER, Indianapolis . . A.B. Sociology. Second Row NELLIE CAROLINE WALTERS, Ft. Wayne . . B.S. Education . . Education Club; W.A.A JOHN FRANCIS YANCHOSEK, Gary . . A.B. English . . I.S.A.; University Theatre; Newman Club; Modern Dance Club .... FRANK E. YODER, Milford . . LL.B. . . Law Club; Gamma Eta Gamma; Student Government Committee .... MARY YOUNG, Glenwood . . B.S. Home Economics . . I.S.A.; Home Economics Club; Education Club; Le Cercle Francois .... RUTH JOAN YOUNG, Bloomington . . B.S. Education .... OTTO ZAJICEK, Knox . . B.S. Chemistry .... JOHN H. ZELLER, Brazil . . B.S. Business . . President, Phi Kappa Psi. Third Row WILLIAM FRANK ZIELINSKI, South Bend . . B.S. Business .... ANDREW M. ZIMMER, Kentland . . B.S. Education . . Sigma Chi; Blue Key; Scabbard and Blade; Phi Epsilon Kappa; Newman Club; I Men ' s Club; Freshman Baseball; Varsity Basketball .... VIRGINIA E. ZIMMERMAN, Decatur . . B.S. Education . . I.S.A.; International Relations Club; Education Club .... DARELL E. ZINK, Bloomington . . B.S. Business . . Delta Chi ... . THOMAS JOSEPH ZIVICH, Whiting . . B.S. Business . . Newman Club; Management Club .... FRANK U. ZOELLER, New Albany . . B.S. Chemistry . . President, American Chemi- cal Society; Newman Club .... WARREN EDWARD ZWEIG, Whiting . . B.S. Business . . Phi Delta Theta; Alpha Phi Omega; Pershing Rifles; Advertising Club. NELLIE CAROLINE JOHN FRANCIS FRANK E. YODER MARY YOUNG WALTERS YANCHOSEK RUTH JOAN OTTO ZAJICEK JOHN H. ZELLER YOUNG WILLIAM FRANK ZIELINSKI VIRGINIA E. ZIMMERMAN DARELL E. THOMAS JOSEPH FRANK U ZINK ZIVICH ZOELLER 320 . :, ■•■. ■■■■.:■■-. ■■■:■: ' Formal Garden adjoining Ball Residence for Nurses Entrance to the Clinical Building Entrance to the Medical School The James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for Children 322 School of Medicine 9. 14. Medicol On a tract of fifty acres on West Michigan Street in Indianapolis, stand the buildings of the Indiana Univer- sity Medical Center. Here the students in the varying stages of their formal training experiment with forceps, listen to heart beats, and attempt to diagnose, under the careful supervision of the medical faculty, the various diseases of their patients. The Medical School Building itself, the Robert W. Long Hospital, the James Whitcomb Riley Memorial Hospital for Children, the William H. Coleman Hospital for Women, two nurses ' residence halls, a Clinical Building, the School of Dentistry Building, the Rotary Convales- cents Home, and the State Board of Health Building, make up the Indianapolis Medical Center. The Training School for Nurses, which is included in the Medical Center, was opened in 1914 and its train- ing courses are under the capable direction of Miss Cordelia Hoeflin. Besides training nurses, however, one of the functions of this School is the instruction of dieti- tians who are under the supervision of Mrs. Lute Troutt. Their training includes a year of internship which im- mediately follows their graduation from courses in di- etetics. They serve, during the course of their intern- ship, in various capacities ranging from the preparation of diets for diabetics to managing the cafeterias that are on the campus for the employees and the students. The facilities of the entire Center for the study of the many branches of medicine make it possible for Indiana University to contribute annually its share of trained persons to help the sick and the suffering. 323 School of Medicine The Dean wins his point — Dean Gatch, Pierre De Lawte John Westfall, Theodore Schlaegel. Organized as a result of several combinations of dif- ferent medical schools, the Indiana University School of Medicine was united finally with the Indiana Medical College in 1908. At that time an act was passed by the legislature authorizing the Trustees of the University to conduct a Medical School in Marion County, to re- ceive gifts of real estate and other property in behalf of the state of Indiana for the maintenance of medical education in said county, and declaring an emergency. The School may be classed as Grade A and ranks high among the nation ' s medical schools, with a faculty including many nationally recognized doctors. Willis D. Gatch, dean of the School, has built it into one of the best in the United States. Recently elected president of the Western Surgical Association, Dean Gatch still has found time to do research and publish his findings in the many surgical journals, speak for vari- ous groups throughout the country, and fulfill his posi- tion in the best manner possible. Students of the School of Medicine have the advan- tage of excellent clinical and teaching facilities. Be- sides the use of the buildings actually belonging to the School, students also have access to the Indianapolis City Hospital and the Central State Hospital. Seniors in Dr. Gatch ' Senior Class Officers Richard Pryor, Maurice Snyde Merle Bundy, Richard Woolery. Seni iA, Elevated to the lofty rank of senior in the School of Medicine, the student at last can look back on his long years of training, not as the ordinary college graduate who is ready to begin his life work, but with the thought that he still has one or more years of hospital intern- ship before he is ready to use his knowledge. Hours and hours at the Medical Center and the Indianapolis City Hospital — examining and interview- ing patients and diagnosing diseases under the guid- ance of the faculty helps prepare the senior medic for the long-awaited time when he is on his own, ready to hang out his shingle and practice his profession in a clinic or hospital or go into the Army Medical Corps. Two weeks of the senior year are spent in the super- vised practice of obstetrics at the City Hospital. Follow- ing the formal training of the medical student, he re- ceives the M.D. degree and at last is ready to embark on the last lap before actual practice is begun. Is it clean, Doc? Otis Bowen and Pauline Detroz. Alward gets tuned up. Martin Krajac, John Alward, Harold Burdette, and Charles Martin. Studying patients ' charts. John Mader, Fred Streib, Albert Applegate, and Faye Sheeley. First Row FORREST L. DENNY, Madison . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Phi Chi; Internship, Wisconsin General Hospitals, Madison, Wisconsin .... PAULINE M. DETRAZ, Vevay . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Nu Sigma Phi; Delta Omicron; Internship, Indiana University Medical Center, Indianapolis .... ROBERT L. DILTS, Ft. Wayne . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Phi Beta Pi; Men ' s Glee Club; Internship, Methodist Hospital, Indianapolis .... THOMAS L. DITTMER, Kouts . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Phi Chi; Internship, Indiana University Medical Center, Indianapolis .... COLIN ELLIOTT, Middlebury . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Phi Beta Pi; Kappa Kappa Psi; Internship; Epworth Hospital, South Bend .... ROBERT J. FENNEMAN, Evansville . . M.D. . . A.B. Evansville College; Phi Beta Pi; Tau Kappa Alpha; Internship, Grasslands Hospital, Valhalla, New York .... ERNEST JAMES FRANKLIN, Indianapolis . . Special Student . . M.D. Berlin University, Ger- many .... DAVID W. GAULKE, Anderson . . M.D. . . A.B. University of North Dakota; Delta Sigma Rho; Internship, Uni- versity of Kansas Hospital, Kansas City, Kansas. Second Row RAYMOND JOSEPH GETZ, Jr., Ft. Wayne . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Phi Delta Theta; Theta Kappa Psi; Internship, Station Hospital, Ft. Sam Houston, San Antonio, Texas .... G EORGE E. GODERSKY, South Bend . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Internship, Indiana University Medical Center, Indianapolis .... LOIS SHOFF GODERSKY, Flora . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Nu Sigma Phi; Internship, Indiana University Medical Center, Indianapolis .... CHARLES GREEN, Plain- field . . M.D. . . A.B. Oklahoma Baptist University; Phi Rho Sigma; Internship, Methodist Hospital, Indianapolis .... MYRON HARRISON GREEN, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Nu Sigma Nu; Beta Theta Pi; Internship, Metho- dist Hospital, Indianapolis .... RICHARD W. HALFAST, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . A.B. Taylor University; Phi Rho Sigma; In- ternship, Springfield City Hospital, Springfield, Ohio .... OSCAR D. HAVENS, Cicero . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Phi Rho Sigma; Internship, Methodist Hospital, Indianapolis .... EDGAR A. HAWK, New Palestine . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Nu Sigma Nu; Alpha Omega Alpha; Phi Beta Kappa; Internship, Indiana University Medical Center, Indianapolis. JOHN HANEY ALWARD t$ a J. HARMAN GEORGE R. OTIS BOWEN JOHN C. BRINK WELBON D. FRANKLIN A. BJORKLUND BLOOM BRITTON BRYAN JOSEPH A. RICHARD E. BUCHMEIER BUCKINGHAM MERLE BUNDY HAROLD F. PAUL EARLAND ROBERT LEE GEORGE L. BURDETTE BURNS CANNON COMPTON MARY ALICE ROBERT A. MARTHA L. JOSEPH B. DAVIS PIERRE DE CRAIG CRAIG CRANDALL LAWTER 326 RAYMOND J GETZ EDGAR A. HAWK First Row JOHN HANEY ALWARD, South Bend . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Phi Beta Pi; Phi Eta Sigma; Marching Hundred; Y.M.C.A.; Internship, Indianapolis City Hospital .... A. EARL APPLEGATE, Frankfort . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Theta Kappa Psi; Varsity Track; Internship, Murray Hospital Clinic, Butte, Montana .... ARNOLD J. BACHMANN, Cambridge City . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Phi Rho Sigma; Internship, Methodist Hospital, Indianapolis .... WALLACE E. BASH, Warsaw . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Nu Sigma Nu; Sigma Chi; Secretary, Junior Class; Alpha Omega Alpha Internship, Indiana University Medical Center, Indianapolis .... MARGARET ANN BASSETT, Thorntown . . M.D. . . A.B Indiana University; Nu Sigma Phi; Alpha Omega Alpha; Internship, Indiana University Medical Center, Indianapolis . . . HELEN BEALL, Rushville . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Alpha Omega Alpha; Alpha Lambda Delta; lota Sigma Pi; Y.W C.A. Cabinet; W.A.A.; Internship, Indiana University Medical Center, Indianapolis .... J B BENNETT, Warren . . M.D . . B.S. Indiana University; Phi Chi; Internship, Wesley Memorial Hospital, Chicago .... ROBERT O. BILL, Indianapolis . M.D. . . Phi Kappa Phi; Phi Chi; Internship, Indianapolis City Hospital. Second Row J. HARMAN BJORKLUND, North Manchester . . M.D. . . A.M. Indiana University; Editor, Medical Section, 1942 Arbutus; In- ternship, Colorado General Hospital, Denver, Colorado .... GEORGE R. BLOOM, Middlebury . . M.D. . . Phi Beta Pi; Intern- ship, United States Public Health Service .... OTIS BOWEN, Crown Point . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Delta Chi; Secretary, Phi Beta Pi; Alpha Omega Alpha; Internship, Epworth Hospital, South Bend .... JOHN C. BRINK, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Nu Sigma Nu; Internship, Methodist Hospital, Indianapolis .... WELBON D. BRITTON, Beech Grove . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Phi Chi; Internship, Indianapolis City Hospital .... FRANKLIN A. BRYAN, Ft. Wayne . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Treasurer, Phi Beta Pi; Internship, Indianapolis City Hospital .... JOSEPH A. BUCHMEIER, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Phi Rho Sigma; Internship, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, Michigan . . . : RICHARD E. BUCKINGHAM, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; President, Phi Beta Pi; Intern- ship, Epworth Hospital, South Bend. Third Row MERLE BUNDY, Salem . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Phi Chi; Vice-President, Senior Class; Internship, United States Public Health Service .... HAROLD F. BURDETTE, Roachdale . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Phi Chi; Internship, Metho- dist Hospital, Indianapolis .... PAUL EARLAND BURNS, Keystone . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Phi Chi; Internship, Springfield City Hospital, Springfield, Ohio .... ROBERT LEE CANNON, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Phi Chi; Internship, United States Public Health Service .... GEORGE L. COMPTON, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Phi Delta Theta; Nu Sigma Nu; Internship, Cleveland City Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio. Fourth Row MARY ALICE CRAIG, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Pi Beta Phi; Internship, Indianapolis City Hospital .... ROBERT A. CRAIG, Gary . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Delta Tau Delta; Nu Sigma Nu; Internship, Indianapolis City Hospital .... MARTHA L. CRANDALL, Princeton . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Sigma Kappa; Nu Sigma Phi; Internship, Indianapolis City Hospital .... JOSEPH B. DAVIS, Marion . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Phi Kappa Psi; Y.M.C.A. Cabi- net; Varsity Tennis; Internship, Philadelphia General Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania .... PIERRE DE LAWTER, India- napolis . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Phi Chi; Internship, United States Public Health Service. 327 DONALD H. McCartney FRANK C. Mcdonald JOHN HENRY MADER BROOKER L. THOMAS O. MASTER MIDDLETON First Row MARY ALBERTA MOSS, Kendallville . . M.D. . . A.B. Hiram College; Nu Sigma Phi ... . EDWARD MUENTZER, Vincennes . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Sigma Chi; Phi Rho Sigma; Internship, Charleston General Hospital, Charleston, West Vir- ginia .... LULLUS P. MULLER, Fowler . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Vice-President, Theta Kappa Psi; Internship, Wil- liam J. Seymour Hospital, Eloise, Michigan .... JOHN H. NILL, Ft. Wayne . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Treasurer, Theta Kappa Psi; Varsity Baseball; I Men ' s Club; Internship, St. Joseph ' s Hospital, Ft. Wayne .... HORACE NORTON, Plain- ville . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Theta Kappa Psi; Internship, Lima Memorial Hospital, Lima, Ohio .... ROBERT PEACOCK, Dunkirk . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Phi Chi; Internship, Indianapolis City Hospital .... WARREN C. POLHEMUS, Anderson . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Nu Sigma Nu; Internship, United States Public Health Service .... J. PAXTON POWELL, Upland . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Treasurer, Phi Chi; Internship, Indianapolis City Hos- pital. Second Row RICHARD CARL PRYOR, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Phi Delta Theta; Phi Rho Sigma; Internship, Metho- dist Hospital, Indianapolis .... EMILE RAVDIN, Evansville . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Phi Chi; Internship, Indiana University Medical Center, Indianapolis .... JOHN J. RIEDER, South Bend . . M.D. . . B.S. University of Notre Dame; Nu Sig- ma Nu; Internship, United States Navy .... ALBERT S. RITZ, Evansville . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Phi Rho Sigma; Internship, St. Joseph Infirmary, Louisville, Kentucky .... EDMUND C. ROLL, Frankfort . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Internship, Indianapolis City Hospital .... J. ROBERT ROTH, Booneville . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Phi Gamma Del- ta; Phi Chi; Internship, Indiana University Medical Center, Indianapolis .... ANDREW SALM, East Gary . . M.D. . . A.B. In- diana University; Internship, Indiana University Medical Center, Indianapolis .... JOHN S. SCHECHTER, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Phi Chi; Internship, Indianapolis City Hospital. 328 First Row C. JULES HERITIER, Columbia City . . M.D. . . A.B. Hanover College; Phi Gamma Delta; Nu Sigma Nu; Sphinx Club; Intern- ship, Indiana University Medical Center, Indianapolis .... OLIVER M. HITCH, Princeton . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Alpha Tau Omega; President, Phi Chi; Internship, Indianapolis City Hospital .... JAMES C. HUMPHREY, Hammond . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Phi Chi; Internship, Butterworth Hospital, Grand Rapids, Michigan .... GUY B. INGWELL, North Judson . . M.D. . . Ed. B. Wisconsin State Teachers College; Phi Chi; President, Junior Class; Internship, St. Margaret ' s Hos- pital, Hammond .... W. DUANE JONES, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Phi Rho Sigma; Internship, Sunnyside Sanitorium, Oaklandon, Indiana. Second Row ROBERT SAMUEL JORDAN, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Phi Chi; Internship, Ft. Sam Houston, San An- tonio, Texas .... ALEXANDER J. KAHN, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Phi Eta Sigma; Internship, Indi- ana University Medical Center, Indianapolis .... EVERETT L. KALB, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . B.S. Butler University; Phi Delta Theta; President, Phi Rho Sigma; Internship, Indianapolis City Hospital .... WILLIAM A. KARSELL, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Phi Delta Theta; Nu Sigma Nu; Treasurer, Freshman Class; Internship, Indianapolis City Hospital .... JEROME M. KORN, Gary . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Pi Lambda Phi; Internship, Indianapolis City Hospital. Third Row MARTIN KRAJAC, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Phi Chi; Internship, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, Michi- gan . . . . C. KARL KUEHNE, South Bend . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Secretary, Nu Sigma Nu; Varsity Swimming; Dolphin Club; Internship, Butterworth Hospital, Grand Rapids, Michigan .... FREDRICK L. KUHN, Plym- outh . . M.D. . . A.B. Manchester College; Phi Beta Pi; Internship, Epworth Hospital, South Bend .... WILLIAM A. KURTZ, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Phi Chi; Delta Upsilon; Internship, Methodist Hospital, Indianapolis .... FORREST R. LA FOLLETTE, New Salisbury . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Theta Kappa Psi; Internship, Indiana University Medical Center, Indianapolis .... CHARLES W. LATSHAW, Carlisle . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Theta Kappa Psi; In- ternship, Louisville City Hospital, Louisville, Kentucky .... BEN L. LEMING, Topeka . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Phi Chi; Delta Chi; Skull and Crescent; Y.M.C.A.; Internship, Springfield City Hospital, Springfield, Ohio .... JOHN KENDALL McBANE, Fortville . . M.D. . . A.B. Earlham College; Internship, United States Public Health Service. Fourth Row DONALD H. McCARTNEY, Fairmount . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Phi Rho Sigma; Internship, Indianapolis City Hospital .... FRANK C. McDONALD, Linton . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Internship, Methodist Hospital, Indianapolis .... JOHN HENRY MADER, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana Central College; Phi Rho Sigma; Internship, Indiana University Medical Center, Indianapolis .... SALVO P. MARKS, Hammond . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Internship, Epworth Hospital, South Bend .... GRIFFITH MARR, Columbus . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Phi Kappa Psi; Phi Eta Sigma; Union Board; Nu Sigma Nu; Alpha Omega Alpha; Internship, United States Navy Hospital .... CHARLES F. MARTIN, Jr., Logans- port . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Vice-President, Phi Beta Pi; Alpha Omega Alpha; Phi Eta Sigma; Internship, Indian- apolis City Hospital .... BROOKER L. MASTER, Plymouth . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Phi Chi; Internship, Edward W. Sparrow Hospital, Lansing, Michigan .... THOMAS O. MIDDLETON, Ridgeville . . M.D. . . Phi Chi; Internship, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. MARY ALBERTA EDWARD LUUUS P. JOHN H. NILL HORACE ROBERT WARREN C. J. PAXTON MOSS MUENTZER MULLER NORTON PEACOCK POLHEMUS POWELL RICHARD CARL EMILE RAVDIN JOHN J. RIEDER ALBERT S. RITZ EDMUND C. ROLL J. ROBERT ROTH ANDREW SALM PRYOR JOHN S. SCHECHTER 329 First Row THEODORE F. SCHLAEGEL, Jr., Indianapolis . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; President, Nu Sigma Nu ; Delta Tau Delta; Phi Beta Kappa; Alpha Omega Alpha; Internship, Indiana University Medical Center, Indianapolis .... FAYE G. SHEELEY, Chesterton . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Nu Sigma Phi; Internship, Methodist Hospital, Gary .... WILLIAM M. SHOLTY, Lafayette . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Phi Beta Pi; Varsity Football; Varsity Wrestling; I Men ' s Club; Business Man- ager, Medical Section, 1942 Arbutus; Internship, Indianapolis City Hospital .... HELEN M. SISSON, Pendleton . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Nu Sigma Phi; Internship, Ball Memorial Hospital, Muncie .... DAVID JOE SMITH, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Phi Chi; Internship, Methodist Hospital, Indianapolis .... MAURICE E. SNYDER, Liberty . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Theta Chi; Secretary, Senior Class; Phi Rho Sigma; Internship, Indiana University Medical Center, Indianapolis .... FREDERICK STREIB, Marion . . M.D. . . A.B. Franklin College; Phi Chi; Internship, Ball Memorial Hospital, Muncie .... CLYDE SUSSMAN, Hartford City . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Sigma Alpha Mu; Marching Hun- dred; Internship, Letterman General Hospital, San Francisco, California. Second Row FRANK W. TINSLEY, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Internship, Station Hospital, Ft. Sam Houston, San An- tonio, Texas .... HARLAN H. TYNER, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . A.B. Butler University; Phi Chi; Internship, United States Public Health Service .... HELEN D. VAN VACTOR, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Nu Sigma Phi; Alpha Omega Alpha; Internship, Indiana University Medical Center, Indianapolis .... VICTOR J. VOLLRATH, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; President, Theta Kappa Psi; Internship, Indianapolis City Hospital .... JOHN B. WESTFALL, Leb- anon . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Phi Kappa Psi; Nu Sigma Nu; Internship, Letterman Hospital, San Francisco, Cali- fornia. Third Row ROGER F. WHITCOMB, Knightstown . . M.D. . . A.B. Hanover College; Phi Gamma Delta; Phi Chi; Internship, Methodist Hos- pital, Indianapolis .... FRANCIS CUSHMAN WHITLOCK, Fairbanks . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Delta Chi; Internship, Methodist Hospital, Indianapolis .... CHARLES D. WILLIAMS, Hartford City . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Phi Chi; Intern- ship, Methodist Hospital, Indianapolis .... JULIUS B. WOHLFELD, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; Sigma Alpha Mu; Internship, Indiana University Medical Center, Indianapolis .... RICHARD WOOLERY, Bedford . . M.D. . . A.B. Indiana University; President, Senior Class; Nu Sigma Nu; Delta Tau Delta; Skull and Crescent; Sphinx Club; Internship, Indian- apolis City Hospital .... J. P. WORLEY, Indianapolis . . M.D. . . B.S. Indiana University; Beta Theta Pi; Nu Sigma Nu; Secre- tary, Freshman Class; Varsity Wrestling; Internship, Indianapolis City Hospital. JULIUS B. WOHLFELD RICHARD WOOLERY J. P. WORLEY 330 Observing an experiment in the light of the hieroglyphics on the blackboard are Dr. Ritchie, Guff Marr, and Tom Middleton .... Watching the rousing sandlot baseball game are Ritz and Roth ... Bash slides to base while Woolery watches anxiously for the ball to come his way as the Med students relax after a strenuous morning of diagnosing .... Cheering for their favorites, but not ambitious enough for active participation in such an energetic ball game, are Davis, Ditts, and Karsall. 331 Two nickels, please — Miss Briscoe, Charles Greene, J. B. Bennett, Fred Kuhn .... Craig and the Escorts — Duane Jones, Thomas Dittmer, J. Elliott, Charles Williams, Mary Alice Craig, Joe Davis, Oliver Hitch .... Polishing the ol ' apple — Gracie Blankenship, Registrar, William Kurtz, Andrew Salm .... Knittin ' for Britton — Margaret Bassett, Mary Moss, Helen Sisson, Martha Crandall .... Future Dr. Kildaires — Forrest La Follette, patient, Don Mc- Cartney .... 332 Please say yes, Mr. Martin — Martha Crandall, John McBane, J. B. H. Martin .... Where ' s Smith? — Dr. Trussler, Guy Engwell, Joe Jewett, Horace Norton, Joe Smith .... Ely Britton and proteges — James Humphrey, Robert Cannon, Forrest Denny, Welbon Brit- ton, Richard Halfast .... Heritier on a B. O. A. — Jules Heritier . . . . Kuehne The Kibitzin ' Kid — Joe Jewett, Karl Kuehne, John Brink .... 333 Assistant Arbutus Staff — Elgin Kintner, John Caton, William Kelly, Chester Stayton .... Trying to bribe Rena — Rena Dean, William Franklin, Robert Schmidt, Robert Switzer .... Between classes in the lounge — George Smith, Gilbert Himebaugh, William Donham, Max Earl .... Junior Class Officers — Dan Bright, James Logan, James Asher, Jerome Holman .... Lingeman seeing what makes Brown tick — Roger Lingeman, Tom Brown .... 334 Pharmacology Lab — Marcella Sullivan, Josephine Van Fleet, Jean Foley, Betty Joy Dickerson .... Coking at City Hospital — Joe Dukes, Clarence Boyd (back), Phil Anthony, Jack Miller, Harold Kosanke .... City Hospital Clinic — James Brennan, Merrill John- son, Hubert Dagley, Dr. Browning, Robert Lohman, Carl Huckle- berry .... Sophomore Pathology Laboratory .... 335 First Row: Chorles Baron, Wal- lace E. Bash, John C. Brink, John E. Caton, George L. Compton, Robert A. Craig, John Jacob De Fries, Jr. Second Row: Grey Diamond, Robert Darr Dodd, Pat Duffy, Ed- ward J. Ettl, Everett W. Gaunt, Myron Harrison Green, Norman B. Hosier. Third Row: Edgar A. Hawk, C. Jules Heritier, Paul Humphrey, Glenn W. Irwin, F. Lamont Jen- nings, William A. Karsell, Charles Fourth Row: C. Karl Kuehne, C. W. Lambert, Hugh McAdams, Griffith Marr, Robert H. Mitchell, Harry W. O ' Dell, Wa rren C. Pol- Fifth Row: Ernest H. Price, Rich- ard Reynolds, John J. Rieder, Theo- dore F. Schlaegel, Jr., William O. Starks, Donald E. Stephens, C. P. Van Meter. Sixth Row: John B. Westfall, Cliff Wiethoff, Ben Wilson, Robert L Witham, Richard Woolery, J. P. Worley. J lu Siatna l lu THEODORE F. SCHLAEGEL, JR. President WILLIAM A. KARSELL jf . . Vice-President CLEM K. KUEHNE, JR.. . Secretary GEORGE W. SMITH . W . Treasurer Nu Sigma Nu, honorary for thirty of the better cam- pus quacks, is one of the many medical fraternities of Indiana University. Once each month the members of this sadistic society meet to discuss the latest marvels of their fellow medical wizards. Local physicians and other prominent speakers are on hand at this time to keep the stories authentic and instructive. In their more serious moments the Nu Sigma Nus carry out the purpose of the fraternity: The elevation of standards of the regular medical profession and cultivation and advancement of medical science and literature. The national organization confers a degree of merit upon the outstanding members. Similar awards are given by the local chapters to two outstanding members. One award is given to the member judged by vote to have been the most valuable to the fraternity during the year and the other is given to the member voted most valuable to the School of Medicine. The last initiation banquet had as its speakers Dr. Pratt of the Ford Hospital in Detroit and Dr. Willis D. Gatch, dean of the University ' s School of Medicine. Nu Sigma Nu is established only in universities and colleges of Class A rating. Both the Indianapolis and Bloomington campuses have active chapters. 336 First Row MARGARET ANN BASSETT HELEN BEALl KATHRYN E. CAMPBELL MARTHA L. CRANDALL PAULINE M. DETRAZ Second Row BETTY JOY DICKERSON LOIS SHOFF GODERSKY MARY ALBERTA MOSS EVELYN G. ROSS FAYE G. SHEELEY Third Row MARY JANE SHERFEY HELEN M. SISSON MARCELLA SULLIVAN HELEN D. VAN VACTOR M U HELEN D. VAN VACTOR. ... President MARGARET ANN B 5| j§. . . .Vice-President MARTHA L. CRANrJAW|JK|ji ' Secretary KATHRYN E. CAMPBELL Treasurer Possibly Nu Sigma Phi, national professional medical fraternity for women, is trying to stop the feud between the Law and Med Schools. At any rate, a step in the proper direction is on the program of activities for the fraternity during the year. Included in the social func- tions are a dinner for women lawyers, the annual initi- ation banquet, and this year a steak fry for the fresh- man coeds at Bloomington. Although semester membership is limited to women physicians and medical students, honorary memberships are given to women in related fields, and scholarships are given by the national organization. With seventeen chapters located in seventeen differ- ent cities in the United States, Gamma, the Indiana chapter, is located in Indianapolis. The purpose of the organization is scientific research, intellectual improvement, and social development. These are carried out in monthly meetings by student papers, book reviews, and prominent speakers. Among the outstanding alumnae of Nu Sigma Phi are Dr. Lillian Miller, charter member of the National Board of Anesthesia; Bertha Rose, who is a school phy- sician at Purdue University; and Amy Ling Chen, who is the assistant director at Western Reserve University. 337 PUi lieia Pi RICHARD E. BUCKINGHAM President CHARLES F. MARTIN . Vice-President OTIS R. BOWEN. . . ttlH? Secretary FRANKLIN BRYAN . .?W. Treasurer Although the skeleton may rattle in the family closet, its ominous sound does not signify a deep, dark secret when it belongs to Omicron Alpha Zeta chapter of Phi Beta Pi, professional medical fraternity. Dragging the skeleton out for exercise once every month, the ten active members of the fraternity meet to discuss business matters, have occasional motion pic- tures on medical subjects and sometimes a prominent speaker in a specialized field. The most important program carried out by the fra- ternity this year was the founding of the Dr. Frank C. Mann Lectureship of Phi Beta Pi, named in honor of Dr. Mann, a distinguished graduate of Indiana University and a member of Phi Beta Pi. The lectureship will be carried on each year by a prominent speaker. A special award of a recognition key is given by Phi Beta Pi each year to the active senior member who has done the most outstanding work for the fraternity dur- ing the current school year. Phi Beta Pi prides itself with the membership of Dr. Mann, its most distinguished member. Other prominent medical men belonging to the fraternity are Dr. Joseph C. Vermilya, Dr. W. F. Clevenger, Dr. W. G. Seaton, Dr. H. H. Wheeler, and Dr. S. L. Carson. First Row: John Haney Alward, Robert J. Ballard, George R. Bloom, Victor Boerger, Angelo Bonaventura, Otis Bowen. Second Row: Franklin A. Bryan, Richard E. Buckingham, Sam W. Campbell, Robert L. Dilts, Joe Dukes, Colin Elliott. Third Row: Ira Faith, Robert J. Fenneman, William J. Gerding, Wayne E. Grodriam, William V. Hare, Walter T. Jurgensen. Fourth Row: Harold E. Kosanke, Fredrick L. Kuhn, Henry S. Lebio- da, Harvey D. Lovett, Charles F. Martin, Richard L. Mason. Fifth Row: Jack B. Miller, Earl H. Mitchell, A. Kemp Mozingo, Lowell F. Peterson, Charles Robert Plank, Malcolm Scamahorn. Sixth Row: William M. Sholty, Jean T. Stoops, Chester A. Stay- ton, Myron J. Van Dorn, Rex K. Whiteman, Lee Roy Woods. 338 piu Glu OLIVER M. HITCH . . JflQB President GILBERT J. HIMEBAliOp 3|k Vice-President FORREST L. DENNY. ?ffi TO Secretary J. PAXTON POWELL hC™ Treasurer Cadavers may be all right for the study of medicine itself, but when members of Phi Chi, professional fra- ternity in medicine, plan their annual spring dance as a complete rest from operating, they wash the formal- dehyde from their hands and really swing out. Organized into sixty-four active chapters, one of which is located in Indianapolis and also is active on the Bloomington campus, P hi Chi fosters closer fellow- ship among its members as well as providing social functions such as the annual steak fry and senior party. The bugbear requirement of all professional organi- zations holds true with Phi Chi since membership is limited to the extent that pledges must have a certain minimum scholarship average in the first year of medical school to be initiated. Each year the chapter gives fra- ternity keys and crests to its graduating class. As usual, the juniors take care of the pledge class, numbering about twenty-three on the Bloomington cam- pus. Meeting every two weeks, the program committee drafts speakers and plans films and entertainment. Phi Chi boasts many prominent alumni. Among these are outstanding physicians of Indianapolis as well as doctors in Bloomington and important medical men throughout the entire state of Indiana. First Row: Philip Anthony, Nor- man Beaver, Evart Beck, J. B. Ben- nett, Robert Bill, Welbon Britton, Merle Bundy, Harold Burdette, Pool Burns. Second Row: Robert Cannon, Robert Chattin, Pierre DeLawter, Melvin Denny, Thomas Dinner, William Douglas, Leland Downard, Clifford Ernst, Forrest Denny. Third Row: Harry Grossnickle, Harold Houser, Arvin Henderson, Don Herrold, Oliver Hitch, Claude Holmes, J. Guy Hoover, William Horst, James Humphrey. Fourth Row: Guy Ingwell, Roger Isenhour, Albin Jankowitz, Robert Jordan, Robert Kimmich, Herschel Kopp, Martin Krajac, Wil- liam Kurtz, Robert LaFollette. Fifth Row: Ben Leming, John McClellan, Joseph McKinley, Har- old Martin, Joe Martin, Brooker Master, Thomas Middleton, Jerald Noffsinger, George Parker. Sixth Row: Robert Peacock, Pax- ton Powell, William Pitkin, Emile Raudin, J. Robert Roth, John Schechter, David Smith, Richard Smith, Edward Swets. Seventh Row: Frederick Streib, Harlan Tyner, Dean Verplank, Roger Whitcomb, Charles Williams, Kenneth Woolling, James Young, Robert Zink. HEUIF™ 339 First Row ARNOLD J. BACHMANN CLARENCE E. BOYD JOSEPH A. BUCHMEIER HARRY F. CARPENTIER CHARLES GREEN CHARLES F. GREGORY Second Row RICHARD W. HALFAST OSCAR D. HAVENS KENNETH HILL W. DUANE JONES EVERETT L. KALB CLEMENT E. KELLEY Third Row donald McCartney john henry mader edward muentzer richard carl pryor albert s. ritz alexander shevchik Fourth Row EARL WINFIELD SIDEBOTTOM LEO MAX SMITH MAURICE E. SNYDER ROBERT W. VERMILYA DONALD C. WHARTON PUi RAa Stc ma EVERETT L. KALB President CHARLES E. GREEN Vice-President ALBERT S. RITZ Secretary HARRY F. CARPENTIER Treasurer Yes, even medical students and doctors must take some time off for a little well-deserved relaxation. It was partially for this purpose that Phi Rho Sigma, national medical fraternity, was organized. One of the aims of this unique Greek letter fraternity is to bring the medics together in a social rather than in a purely academic way. The two-fold objective of the group is to promote good fellowship among congenial men in medical schools in the United States and to encourage high standards of professional work. Emphasis also is placed upon social contact between the students at the University ' s Medical Center in Indianapolis and the large alumni chapter in the Hoosier state capital. The group meets once each month in the homes of the Indianapolis physicians at which time there are informal discussions on medical problems as well as on numerous topics dealing with current events. Each win- ter the Phi Rho Sigma brotherhood sponsors a formal dinner and dance in Indianapolis, and annual Christ- mas and spring banquets form the group ' s social events in Bloomington. Despite the social emphasis, however, such activities are not the sole interest of the group, for each year the fraternity makes loans to worthy junior and senior medi- cal students who are Phi Rho Sigma members. 340 First Row: Nevin Aiken, A. Earl Applegale, Robert O. Bethea, El- mer R. Billings, Robert J. Duffner, William B. Ferguson, James S. Fitzpatrick. Second Row: Raymond Joseph Getz, Jr., Byron Harrison, Jack H. Horton, C. Ray Johnson, Edward Kattany, William A. Koontz, For- rest R. LaFollette. Third Row: Charles W, Latshaw, Fletcher McDowell, Richard C. Minczewski, Lullus P. Muller, Den- nis Nicholas, John H. Mill, Horace Norton. Fourth Row: John F. Phillips, Eugene S. Rifner, Howard H. Rowe, William Schafer, Robert L. Schmidt, Charles H. Schmall, Tom Sheller. Fifth Row: Roger C. Smith, Rob- ert E. Switzer, Pierre C. Talbert, F. Miller Thornburg, Sherman B. Trotter, Victor J. Vollrath, John R. Weber. Ueta Kafupxi Pii VICTOR J. VOLLRATH President LULLUS P. MULLER Vice-President RAYMOND J. GETZ, JR Secretary JOHN H. NILL Treasurer If Theta Kappa Psi members were diagnosing medical fraternities rather than physical ills, they probably would consider their own organization as one suffering from old age, only they undoubtedly would say that it was a sign of well-being rather than an indication of its being ready for the grave. The oldest organization of its kind in existence, Theta Kappa Psi was founded in 1879 in New Haven, Con- necticut. Meeting twice each month to see movies of important surgical operations or to listen to informal talks by medical faculty members, the group has no special interest in a particular field of medicine but stresses all phases of medical endeavor. Although the fraternity presents an honorary key to its most valuable senior at its formal initiation banquet each year, it does not overlook the social life of its members. Following the senior dinner a dance offers pleasant diversion from the usual lengthy discussions on the best sutures and the most ultra-modern methods of anesthetizing a patient. Outstanding alumni of the fraternity include Dr. Cul- bertson of the Division of Clinical Pathology and direc- tor of central laboratories at the Medical Center, and Dr. Boyd, head of the Center ' s psychiatry department. 3 1 Training School for Nurses Miss Cordelia Hoeflin, director of the Nurses Training School, talks things over with Edith Smith and Carolyn Kinney. Potential future Florence Nightingales learn to do their part in a world at war at the Indiana University Training School for Nurses with the type of training that will be equally as effective in a world at peace. For the education both of nurses and dietitians, the school was opened in Indianapolis in 1914 ■— in due time for it to play its part in World War I, a role which it is con- tinuing in the current international crisis. Lofty ideals confront the student nurse, for it is the purpose of the School to maintain a high standard of nursing, to give the best type of nursing care to the sick, and to give to young women who choose nursing as a profession every opportunity of becoming com- petent and broad-minded members of the community. Nor is the social side of life neglected at the Uni- versity ' s Training School for Nurses at the Indianapolis Medical Center. Planned almost entirely by members of the student body, extra-curricular activities include a choral club, a basketball team playing home and return games with other nursing schools, tennis, dancing, and teas, both formal and informal. The School is under the direction of Miss Cordelia Hoeflin. learn to prepare food. IK Nurses in the dining room — Laura E. Johnson, Faye Kiewitt, Mary M. Morrow, Elma Dehne, Edith Smith .... Georgia Belle Berries — Arbutus Editor for Nurses and Senior Class president .... Informal group of nurses in the living room in Ball Residence .... Studying in the Library — Margaret Heideman, Anne Johnson .... Informal in the lounge — Chrystal Hendrick, Rowena Jamison, Mary Lucas, Jean Wray .... 343 SHIRLEY IONE JUDITH A. ANN JESSUP LAURA ELLEN FAYE AILEEN DOROTHY JESSIE IRENE MARY MARTHA FOUST HARRIS JOHNSON KIEWITT LATHROP MITCHELL MORROW First Row WANDA LOUISE MURPHY, Leban on . . G.N. . . Sigma Theta Tau ; Alpha Lambda Delta .... ANN ELIZABETH POORMAN, Huntington . . G.N. . . Y.W.C.A.; Le Cercle Francois .... DORIS MAE REED, Ft. Harrison . . G.N MARY JANE RUSSELL, Portland . . G.N. . . Choral Club .... DOROTHY ANNE SCEA, Dickey, North Dakota . . G.N. . . Choral Club. Second Row EDITH SMITH, Madison . . G.N. . . Sigma Theta Tau . . . . JEAN SOUTHERN, Flushing, Ohio . . G.N. . . Sigma Theta Tau; Choral Club .... FRIEDA MAY STANCOMB, Bedford . . G.N LOIS MARIE SWANGO, Switz City . . G.N. . . Vice-President, Sen- ior Class .... HELEN JEAN WILLCUTTS, Haverstick Park . . G.N DAISY DOLORES WILLIAMS, Ely, Nevada . . G.N. 344 First Row LOU ALICE ARBOGAST, Indianapolis . . G.N EDITH ELSIE BEHRENS, Anderson . . G.N. . . Delta Delta Delta; Sigma Theta Tau; Y.W.C.A.; W.A.A.; Girls ' Glee Club .... GEORGIA BELLE BERRIER, Rochester . . G.N. . . President, Senior Class; Sigma Theta Tau; Editor, Nurses ' Section, 1942 Arbutus .... BETTY SUZANNE BRAMMER, Indianapolis . . G.N BETTY LOU BROWN, Franklin . . G.N. . . Pi Beta Phi ... . BARBARA BUNDY, South Bend . . G.N ELMA DEHNE, Warren . . G.N MARGARET DUNCAN, Kokomo . . G.N. Second Row SHIRLEY IONE FOUST, Plainville . . G.N. . . Treasurer, Senior Class .... JUDITH A. HARRIS, Bloomington . . G.N. . . Sigma Kappa; Y.W.C.A.; Choral Club .... ANN JESSUP, Carmel . . G.N LAURA ELLEN JOHNSON, Boswell . . G.N. . . Phi Omega Pi; Sigma Theta Tau; President, Junior Class .... FAYE AILEEN KIEWITT, Crothersville . . G.N DOROTHY LATH- ROP, Robinson, Illinois . . G.N JESSIE IRENE MITCHELL, Bloomington . . G.N. . . Alpha Omicron Pi ... . MARY MARTHA MORROW, Indianapolis . . G.N. . . Choral Club. EDITH SMITH JEAN SOUTHERN FRIEDA MAY STANCOMB 345 School of Dentistry DEAN WILLIAM H. CRAWFORD Despite the stories one reads of Egyptian mummies found with fillings in their teeth, evidence shows that the ancient doubler in brass for the modern dentist did confine his practice largely to the extraction of teeth he thought to be bad (probably some good ones slipped out too) and to the manufacturing of numerous quantities of artificial tooth substitutes. At the Indiana University School of Dentistry, how- ever, such mistakes never would be made with the ex- tensive and thorough training and the rigid entrance re- quirements now enforced. Two years of pre-profes- sional training in college and four more years before the DDS degree is granted virtually insure the American public of the Indiana dental student ' s adequate knowl- edge of exactly the thing to do in case of a toothache. Dr. William H. Crawford, dean of the School of Den- tistry, has announced several innovations that recently have been added to the School. The freshman dental subjects now are given on the Bloomington campus. At the Indianapolis center, a new laboratory was estab- lished last year which facilitates testing of all kinds of dental materials. Through the work of Dr. Frederic R. Henshaw, former dean of the School, the old Indiana Dental College amalgamated with the University. Dental students learn by experience. Hi ...iViu.lii.ljSj W SettionA, Graduating from the college of novocaine and cotton wadding does not mean establishing an office including as accessories a chair that elevates and a knowledge of the most subtle way to say Open just a little wider please. Seniors in the School of Dentistry of the class of 1942 immediately upon receiving the DDS degree will be tapped on the shouder by Uncle Sam and sent to fix the teeth of the men in service. Topping the 1941 class by only one student, this year ' s seniors have an advantage in that they will be graduated almost a month earlier than last year ' s group because of the University ' s speed-up program. The Indiana University School of Dentistry is a mem- ber of the American Association of Dental Schools, which means that if the seniors could go into private practices this year, they would be able to obtain li- censes for their profession in any state in the United States, a recent achievement for the School. Senior Class Officers DENNIS WELP President ROBERT WURTZ ......Vice-President DARRELL STOCK Secretary-Treasurer Seniors Stock and Feldman in Oral Diagn Dr. Rogers demonstrates to Seniors Lowery and Burks in Crown and Bridge Clinic. Seniors White, Stoner, and Henning X-Ray Berman. First Row FRED BALDWIN, Indianapolis . . D.D.S. . . A.B. Indiana University; Junior A.D.A.; Secretary, Junior Class; Student Council .... ALLY N. BURKS, Indianapolis . . D.D.S. . . Delta Sigma Delta; President, Sophomore Class; Junior A.D.A AULDEN K. BUSH, Indianapolis . . D.D.S. . . Xi Psi Phi; Vice-President, Student Council .... JACK FEINTUCH, Brooklyn, New York . . D.D.S. . . B.S. University of Arkansas; Alpha Omega; Junior A.D.A.; Business Manager, Medical Section, 1942 Arbutus .... MARTIN FELDMAN, New London, Connecticut . . D.D.S. . . B.S. Purdue University,- Vice-President, Sophomore Class; Student Council .... JOHN W. GILCHRIST, Greensburg . . D.D.S. . . Alpha Tau Omega; Junior A.D.A R. L. GROMER, West Baden . . D.D.S. . . Grand Master, Delta Sigma Delta; Vice-President, Junior Class; Vice-President, Student-Council; Junior A.D.A SHELDON HALL, Indianapolis . . D.D.S. . . Xi Psi Phi; Secretary, Student Council; President, Junior Class; Junior A.D.A. Second Row WILLIAM FAY HENNING, Booneville . . D.D.S. . . Delta Sigma Delta; Student Council; Junior A.D.A CHARLES CLAYTON LOWERY, Balkan, Kentucky . . D.D.S. . . Xi Psi Phi; Junior A.D.A RICHARD SHENK MICHENER, Kokomo . . D.D.S. . . B.S. Indiana University; Delta Upsilon; Delta Sigma Delta; Alpha Phi Omega; Junior A.D.A PAUL HERATH PRUETT, Brook . . D.D.S. . . Delta Sigma Delta; Junior A.D.A DARRELL A. STOCK, Greenfield . . D.D.S. . . Secretary, Junior A.D.A.; Xi Psi Phi; Theta Kappa Nu ; President, Student Council; Secretary, Senior Class .... MORRIS M. STONER, New London, Connecticut . . D.D.S. . . Student Council; President, Junior A.D.A.; Chancellor, Alpha Omega. Third Row ELDRED WILLIAM STOUT, Silver Lake . . D.D.S. . . A.B. Indiana University; Sigma Pi; Xi Psi Phi; Treasurer, Sophomore Class; Junior A.D.A GEORGE J. STRAGAND, Jr., Dunkirk . . D.D.S. . . President, Xi Psi Phi; Vice-President, Sophomore Class; Junior A.D.A DENNIS WELP, Jasper . . D.D.S. . . President, Senior Class; Treasurer, Delta Sigma Delta; Junior A.D.A. .... LEO HOWARD WHITE, Valparaiso . . D.D.S. . . Delta Sigma Delta; Editor, Dental Section, 1942 Arbutus; Junior A.D.A. .... ROBERT W. WURTZ, Indianapolis . . D.D.S. . . President, Freshman Class; Junior A.D.A.; Student Council; Vice-President, Senior Class. FRED BALDWIN ALLY N. BURKS AULDEN K. BUSH JACK FEINTUCH MARTIN FELDMAN JOHN W. GILCHRIST R. L. GROMER SHELDON HALL WILLIAM FAY CHARLES C. RICHARD SHENK PAUL HERATH DARRELL A. MORRIS M HENNING LOWERY MICHENER PRUETT STOCK STONER ELDRED W. STOUT GEORGE J. STRAGAND 348 Dr. Boyd demonstrates to seniors Mickener and Pruitt .... Dr. Healy explains fine point in cavity preparation to seniors Hall and Gromer .... Miss Long helps Stout and Baldwin, seniors .... Seniors Bush and Feintuch in Children ' s Clinic .... 349 Dr. Cheyne demonstrates new instrument to Ritter and Keller in the research lab ... . Lyth, Shumaker, Good, Clark, and Weather- ford at 5 o ' clock .... Shaffer, Good, Davis, Gwinn, and Lyth scrub- bing up .... Dr. Beuhler, Laughor, Yoder, and Furst in Oral sur- gery clinic .... Weatherford, Babcock, and Epstein listen while Neiderhoffer plays .... Young, Clark, Shaw, and Dr. Koss in Oral Diagnosis clinic .... 350 Sophomores in Operative Dentistry Laboratory .... Babcock, Davis, Poorman, and Furst ready to start a big day .... Stock, Clark, and Arthur in the lounge .... Seniors White and Welp getting refreshed in the lounge .... Phillips demonstrates in materials research laboratory to White and Poorman .... Dr. Healy plans Jr. A. D. A. meeting with Gwinn, Siever, and Raibley .... 351 First Row ROBERT A. BABCOCK AULDEN K. BUSH WALTER DUNLOP HAROLD FURST RUSSELL GOEBEL Second Row DAVID LOUIS GROHER SHELDON HALL JAMES W. POWERS R. OUENTIN ROYER Third Row FREDERICK M. SCHAFFER PAUL E. STARKEY DARRELL A. STOCK EUGENE YODER jbental Student GoutuUl As each school in the University must have some sort of co-ordinating body between the students and faculty, the School of Dentistry established in 1939 a Student Council composed of the class officers and two members of each class which are appointed by the presidents of the various classes to carry out this work. The faculty is represented by Dean William H. Craw- ford and such members of the faculty as are called in from time to time to settle a particular problem con- fronting the dental students. Meeting each month, the members of the Council rep- resent the student body and present any problems which may disrupt the program of the school that need solving in such an organization. The Council also discusses grievances brought to its attention and proposes meas- ures to alleviate them. Although the Student Council has been in existence only a few years, it recently has become an efficient, closely knit organization which aids materially in the mutual betterment of the School from the standpoint of both faculty and student body. Respect for the existence of student problems on the part of the faculty and a desire to settle them has led to the success of the Dental Student Council. 352 j)« dvi A. 2 . A. MORRIS STONER President FREDERICK SCHAFFER Vice-President DARRELL STOCK Secretary-Treasurer To discuss problems which are likely to confront the dental graduate and for the purpose of guidance along principles advocated by the association for a successful and worthy career in dentistry, the Junior American Den- tal Association was founded in 1934, the second of its kind to be established in the United States. Reorganized in 1939, the group now is conducted under the auspices of the American Dental Association and the School of Dentistry. The group furthers the edu- cation of its members by means of lectures and clinics given by men distinguished in their particular field. Membership in the Association is limited to sopho- mores, juniors, and seniors in good standing in the pro- fessional school. Upon graduation, all junior members automatically become senior members of the American Dental Association. Aside from its purpose to give the student a stable beginning in organized dentistry and to equip him better for a full and useful career in his chosen profession, however, the association annually gives the Junior A.D.A. dance which is one of the outstanding activities of the School of Dentistry ' s school year. Organized at Indiana in 1940, the group now boasts seventy-five per cent of those eligible for membership. 353 First Row ROBERT N. BERMAN WILLIAM J. BORMAN EDWARD BRONSTEIN STANLEY E. EPSTEIN Second Row JACK S. FEINTUCH DAVID L. GROHER SAMUEL KANE MORRIS M. STONER AlnUa QmetfG, MORRIS STONER Chancellor SAMUEL KANE Quaestor STANLEY EPSTEIN Scribe Nursing along that toothache and forgetting to see a dentist about it would not merit the wholehearted approval of members of Alpha Omega, dental frater- nity, because they are working to further the interests of dental students throughout the country. Not all their work is confined to fixing decayed or decomposing teeth, however, since Alpha Gamma chap- ter at Indiana University presented a mobile dental unit and an ambulance to the Canadian Dental Corps and now plans to make similar presentations to the United States and its Allies since that need is present. Foremost in the ideal of the fraternity is its uncom- promising stand in favor of ethical practice. For meri- torious contributions to the art and science of dentistry, Alpha Omega presents annually several awards includ- ing an Achievement Medal. Chapter awards also are given to the senior member who has the highest average for his first three years, and to the member who has done noteworthy service for the chapter. Founded by the joining of the Ramach group of the Philadelphia College of Dental Surgery and the Alpha Omega group of Maryland University, the fraternity has grown and extended its interests until it now has active chapters in most of the country ' s dental schools. 354 First Row ALLY N. BURKS ROBERT CLARK RUSSELL GOEBEL ROSCOE L. GROMER GEORGE A. GWINN Second Row WILLIAM HENNING J. WILLIAM LYTLE CHARLES J. McFALL RICHARD S. MICHENER MERLE NIEDERHOFER Third Row ROBERT PICKARD ALDEN H. POORMAN PAUL H. PRUETT MELVIN RITTER Fourth Row JOHN B. SHAW MARSH E. SHUMAKER DENNIS A. WELP LEO H. WHITE jbelta Siiftfia 2 eua ROSCOE GROMER Grand Master WILLIAM HENNING . - «J g- . . .Worthy Master RICHARD MICHENER §C Secretary DENNIS WELP K Treasurer We started this good old dental custom, boast the members of Delta Sigma Delta — for their fraternity has the distinction of being the first Greek letter group organized specifically for dental students and graduates of the profession. From its founding place at the University of Michigan in 1882, the organization has spread to almost every state in the union and to several foreign countries. The fraternity now consists of thirty-three subordinate chap- ters in addition to forty-one auxiliary chapters, includ- ing those in Australia, England, France, and Holland. An added boast of the Delta Sigma Delta brother- hood is its privately owned bus used exclusively to transport its members from the fraternity house at 1424 Central Avenue in Indianapolis to their dental classes at the Indiana University Medical Center. The local chapter, Xi, was founded in January, 1900, at the Indiana Dental College, which since that time has become a part of Indiana University. Preparedness now is the by-word of the Xi chap- ter members as they plan for a busy year ahead keep- ing up with the speed-up program, in addition to tak- ing care of the twenty-five pledges who will descend on them in May from the Bloomington campus. 355 P i Omeaa FREDERICK SCHAFFER Grand Master WILLIAM MICHELI Secretary WAYNE KIRCHOFF Treasurer Some dentists, at least, believe in using modern, pain- less methods and the practice of instilling confidence in their patients. Psi Omega, dental fraternity, has set up as its ideals exerting its influence untiringly for the advancement of the dental profession in methods of teaching, of practice, and of jurisprudence. Founded nationally at the Baltimore College of Den- tal Surgery in 1 872, the Omega chapter at Indiana Uni- versity was organized in 1903. Current topics pertaining to dentistry are the order of the monthly meetings of the Indianapolis School of Dentistry campus at the club room in the Columbia Club. Preparing for an onslaught of new pledges, the fraternity has a smoker on the Bloomington campus in the fall of each year. Other than its high ambitions for the practical ef- ficiency of its members when they begin fitting braces, placing inlays, and filling and pulling teeth, the fra- ternity hopes to cultivate the social qualities of its mem- bers, to surround each with friends to whom he can turn for advice and assistance, and by means of a quar- terly journal, The Frater, to keep its members in touch with others and to assist them in all of their laudable undertakings. Dr. William Barb of Indianapolis is the deputy councilor of the organization. First Row BILL GITKEN WILLIAM COMBS WALTER W. DUNLOP FRED HAMP Second Row ROY KIXMILLER WAYNE F. KIRCHOFF JAMES MATLOCK Third Row WILLIAM D. MICHELI FREDERICK M. SCHAFFER R. F. WHITE 356 Xi Pdi Plu GEORGE STRAOMRp President AULDEN BUS B|  .Vice-President HAROLD FURST SaL.V . F. Secretary ELDRED STOUT V jfT... Treasurer Comes a headache, you can lose it in a day; comes a toothache, see your dentist right away ... might well be the theme song of Xi Psi Phi, first dental frater- nity at the Indiana Dental College in 1 893, as they work with nice buzzy drills and good tasting anesthetics. The second dental fraternity to be organized nation- ally, the Theta chapter of Xi Psi Phi is the only dental organization in which every initiate receives life mem- bership in the alumni chapter upon his graduation. In- cluded with this membership is the lifetime subscription to the fraternity quarterly magazine. A secret organization (most things a dentist does to one ' s innocent teeth are shrouded in mystery apparent- ly), the group was organized to provide a better and more substantial foundation on which to build a success- ful professional life; to develop a brotherhood based on the character of the individual and deny the superficial instinct which prompts a fictitious valuation placed upon wealth, blood or rank. Xi Psi Phi grew rapidly after its founding and estab- lished forty-six chapters. Now, due to mergers of many universities as well as discontinuance of private schools, there are twenty-five chapters at the leading universities in the United States and Canada. First Row AULDEN K. BUSH HAROLD D. FURST WESLEY C. GOOD SHELDON L. HALL GEORGE W. JAMES Second Row ROBERT W. LANGOHR CHARLES C. LOWERY CHARLES F. POPE R. QUENTIN ROYER JAMES SPEAR Third Row PAUL E. STARKEY DARRELL A. STOCK ELDRED W. STOUT GEORGE J. STRAGAND 357 Dielitions in class: Gail Davis, Dorothy Eberhardt, Esther Berges, Grace McAllister, Jacqueline Badger, Eldora Wahlert, Vivian Parr, Barbara Dwight, Irma Lee, Dorothy Montgomery, Jane Rothenberger, and Lute Troutt, director. L U. Trains Located in the Clinical Building on the campus of the School of Medicine in Indianapolis, are the offices and classrooms for the Training Course for Social Work. A part of the Graduate School, the subjects offered are advanced courses in social welfare work. Also part of the School of Medicine, is the Dietitians ' course for women. This course offers advanced students an opportunity for further study in institutional and hospital dietetics, and includes practical experience and theoretical instruction in administrative practice and general organization of kitchens. The dietitians in the course of their training, which also is on the Indianapo- lis campus, alternate service in the Robert W. Long Hospital, William H. Coleman Hospital for Women, and the James Whitcomb Riley Hospital. The Technicians ' course, also offered under the School of Medicine, carries preparation for work as a tech- nician and leads to the B.S. degree. It consists of eighty- three hours at Bloomington, with the work of the second semester of the third year at Indianapolis. Student technicians talk things over: Betty Hamilton, Margaret Muscente, Mary Jane Armstrong, Marda Beth Tedford, Helen Kattlowski, Marjory Evans, Dorothy Mekler, Cornelia Conner, Marian Seiner, Mildred Young, and Dr. C. G. Culbertson. In the lounge, Carol Lee Geisler, Martha M. S. Stearns, Anne Withers, Martha Modenger, Edelson S. Eric, and Martin Kassan .... Discussing train- ing course, Mary Ann Hyde, Martin Kassan, and Professor Louis E. Evans .... Discussing field work, Margaret C. Miller, director of field work, Gerald McClain, Mildred Pleasant Rumbold, and Deofis Hardeman .... Social work students in confer- ence, Edelson S. Eric, Roberta Kassan, Adeline Hyman, and Instructor George W. Eggleston. and Social WosJi iL 359 1 1 an e xhibit ion d ill tor the H ome- com ng ce ebrat on a t M.C.A.G.U. this yea is the soph Dmo re da ss w ith the girls doir g hanc star ds on a big hoop. Another port of the Homecoming exhi- bition is a combined group of classes posing in a formation pattern for the end of a dance. PlufAical Zducatlo-H uU Uh, j, In November of 1941, the muscle factory division of our University, the Normal College of the American Gymnastic Union in Indianapolis, observed the first anni- versary of its connection with Indiana University in true Homecoming style. Old Grads reminisced and members of the faculty spoke, mainly on N.C.A.G.U. ' s first year as a part of Indiana University. Dr. W. W. Patty of the School of Education was appointed director of the school at the time of the merger of the two institutions. Although the merger of the two schools took place only a short time ago, they had been affiliated for eight years previously, and before the merger, Normal Col- lege students were required to go to school three years on the Indianapolis campus and one year on the Bloomington campus, after which they received a bachelor ' s degree from both schools. Under the new arrangement, graduates will receive a B.S. degree in physical education after spending two years at the Indianapolis school and completing the four-year term on the Bloomington campus. Located at the Athenaeum in Indianapolis, the N.C.A.G.U. has an enrollment of approximately 100 students. Carl B. Sputh, ' 12, is president of the school, which was founded in 1 866, and the instructional staff numbers twenty-three. Five of these are members of the Indiana University faculty. Indiana was fortunate in receiving, along with the facilities of the Normal College, its library, which is recognized as one of the most complete of its type in the entire country. 361 t, V wj The facilities of the Extension Division include a new movie studio for the use of various departments in the University to show edu- cational films pertaining to their courses. Fully equipped with a projector and screen, this particular studio in Wylie Hall is used for a class room and the showing of films whenever it is needed for visual education purposes. JhuA I. U. EXTENSION Se ivel Alt Moo44 ido4 t Extending the University ' s sphere of influence throughout the entire state is the Extension Division with its Bureaus of Class Instruction, Correspondence Study, and Lectures, as well as the Public Welfare Service with its Bureaus of Public Dis- cussion, Audio-Visual Aids, and Child Welfare. Offering several hundred different courses, most of which are undergraduate in the College of Arts and Sciences, the Extension Division clso offers a limited number of courses carrying gradua te credit. Various faculty members go out for single lectures any place over the state where there is a request, supplementing the work of the regular Extension staff. The five Extension Centers, as well as classes in many other cities, make it pos- sible for students to enter into activities and recreation with- out the expenditure for the heavier fees of work on the University campus. The Public Welfare Service has to do with the less tradi- tional methods of instruction, employing those which serve best certain community needs, while the Public Discussion Bureau offers such services as the package library loans, lend- ing of plays to high schools, and has charge of various high school contests. The work of the Bureau of Audio-Visual Aids is to loan public schools and community agencies slides and exhibits, and to provide the use of its well-equipped photo- graphic laboratory which does special work for the News Bureau, faculty members, and various campus publications. 362 One very excellent way to avoid listening to lectures day in and day out, it seems, is to take college work by corre- spondence. Practically the entire four years or, rather, two and two-thirds years under the new speed-up program, is available through correspondence courses. Sponsored by the Extension Division, students enrolled in correspondence courses must do regularly assigned work and submit their written lessons as soon as they are completed. In this way, it is possible to work and obtain a college edu- cation at the same time. For enterprising persons, ' tis an ex- cellent way to get a little book larnin ' , and work toward an Indiana University sheepskin. Directed by H. W. Norman, the Calumet Center has facili ties for students in a large share of Lake County. £ F. R. Neff is director of the Fort Wayne Center which serves also small towns around the city. Executive secretary of the Indianapolis Extension Center is Mary B. Orvis. With L. K. Caldwell as executive secretary of the South Bend-Mishawaka Center, many students attend its classes. Completing the Extension roster is the new Falls City Area Center with F. I. McMurray as director. Ready to shoot the tiny figures m division pages of the 1942 Arbutus, is Herb for the Bureau of Audio-Visual Aids, who tc d e by Mo ge Ha broo k fo r the su 3- t J. Re dtke o e o f the pho tographe rs k the pictu res for this year s book. 363 Whether you use the 1942 Arbutus as a paper weight, an index to blind dates, a memory book, a file for pressed leaves, the source book of campus information, or for any other conceivable purpose, we hope that you enjoy it throughout the years to come; for we have tried to make it to your liking. In spite of the fact that we spent our waking hours working and worrying about the Arbutus and our sleep- ing hours (few, to be sure) dreaming about it, neglected to go to classes, and visited the Commons only with a camera under one arm and a sheaf of copy under the other, it would have been impossible to publish this book without the help of a number of non-staff members. We want to take this opportunity to thank those persons listed below for their very valuable assistance in various fields: Ward G. Biddle, Comptroller; L. L. Fisher, ticket manager; Claude Black, purchasing agent; Robert Burton, financial adviser; Earl Simms of the ticket office; Andrew G. Olofson, editorial adviser; Brooks Smeeton, layout adviser; E. Ross Bartley, director of the University News Bureau; Lloyd Evans of the Bureau of Audio-Visual Aids; Mrs. Mary Truelock of the Extension Division; Dr. William Lowe Bryan, President Emeritus; Jac Ochiltree of the Kingsport Press; John Engelbrecht of Keller-Crescent Printing Company; and Robert E. Stafford of Stafford Engraving Company. Other non-staff members who assisted ably in the production of this book are Bill Spencer, Knight McKesson, Wini Young, Margy Dickson, Bob Price, Marilyn Taylor, and Agnes Brown. Among the freshman helpers are Bob Curry, Mary Pat Doyle, Joan Goldsmith, Pat Harris, Marge Hulett, Jim Howard, Ben Howard, Pat Kriegh- baum, Mark Rudolph, Bill Wilson, Bob Young, Bob Levin, Phil Huffine, Francis Neal, Connie Nicora, Virginia Brown, Stan Sterbenz, and Art Overbay. The 1942 Arbutus Staff. 364 Retail Price - - - Second-Hand Price - Third-Hand Price - $3.58 $3.58 $3.58 THE HISTORY of I. and U. in ' 42 OR HYSTERICALLY SPEAKING by Lucius P. Greind, PhD., TNE, ex post facto, AWOL, R.S.V.P. TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter I Indiana Was Founded Chapter II Women Are Introduced Chapter III Physical Education Chapter IV Politics Chapter V Social Season Chapter VI Big Stories Not Happening Chapter VII Spring and Lover Impulses Chapter VIII Study Chapter IX Farewell to Seniors Chapter X Final Examination Appendix AUTHOR ' S NOTE This is humor. This is a history of Indiana University. Any similarity between this book and a textbook is purely incidental and mostly our fault. The 1942 Arbutus would like to publish a supplement that would include all the gush (the stuff you ' d really like to read) that we collected but couldn ' t print. 366 Chapter I INDIANA WAS FOUNDED or I. U. FROM 1820 TO 1942 Breaking through the morasses of Brown and Monroe counties, several stalwart pio- neers descended upon Bloomington in 1820 — then only a city of two tea rooms and a single billiard hall — and founded Indiana University. Where they found it nobody knows. (Gag courtesy of, or stolen from, the 1924 Arbutus). The little college grew by leaps and bounds and bounds and leaps. Its enroll- ment jumped from a student body hardly large enough to collect enough tuition from enough students to support (a) three pro- fessors, (b) two fraternities, (c) a Strut and Fret Society, and (d) the newly founded Monon Railroad. The enrollment doubled. The enrollment quadrupled. Something had to be done. It was. Another building was built. This has continued until the present day, depending upon each respective administration ' s influ- ence with each respective governor, legisla- ture, etc. This year — 1942, a new bird house was erected by the Department of Botany and Bacteriology. It was for birds. This doesn ' t have much to do with history, but illustrates in a graphic manner the strides forward that can be made by a progressive institu- tion. There was a war and draft this year. One of the best excuses of the year was, I had to go to Indianapolis to be examined for the Marine Air Corps. CHAPTER II WOMEN ARE INTRODUCED (Author ' s Note: This does not mean intro- ducing women like, Millie, this is Tillie; Tillie, this is Millie. Read and learn). This year — at the sound of the tinkle in the Bookstore ' s coffers — it will be ex- actly 1942, the year that marks the seventy- fifth anniversary of the introduction of women on the campus. The social implica- tions of this move are important; in fact, women are believed by most authorities to be essential for the continued social life of any college. Women students, also called coeds, seem to have come to stay. As a permanent fixture of the University they deserve some notice — so notice that this year ' s Arbutus includes many pictures of women students. This is our contribution to the worthy cause. Sarah Parke Morrison was the first coed on the campus, and the Arbutus this year devotes a page to her. It is rumored that she had very little trouble getting dates. CHAPTER III PHYSICAL EDUCATION Do fifty more push-ups and four quick laps around the track. Thus did old I.U. begin in 1942 to work off the excess flabbiness and dissipation that had run rampant among the eds on campus for so long. Thus were many poor lads bruised and strained and fitted for the rigors of military life. (ADV.). By means of the savage stretching of muscles, conditioning was brought about. The Arbutus made a scientific study of the typical muscle when subjected to physical education. A cross section of a muscle- — selected at random from many applicants, was drawn before and after the process described. 367 INDEX TO ADVERTISERS Akron Surgical House 384 L. G. Balfour Co 370 Bouquet Shop 376 Brown Collegiate Mfg. Co 379 Central Business College 370 City Securities Corporation 370 Claypool Hotel 373 Coca-Cola 370 College Inn 370 T. M. Crutcher Dental Depot 372 Dandale 376 Dexheimer-Carlon 374 Ellis Floral Co 372 Feltus Printing Co 369 First National Bank 384 The Gables 372 Nathan Hale 382 The Heckman Bindery 373 George Hitz Co 373 Home Laundry 368 Ideal Laundry 383 Indiana Fur Co 376 I. U. Bookstore 368 I. U. Printing Plant 371 Indiana Roof 375 Johnson ' s Creamery 383 Kahn Clothing Co 371 Keller-Crescent Co 380 Kingan Co 379 Maxwell C. Lang 383 Miles Laboratories 378 Uat lit eU-Q loomed Appearance For Expert Cleaning and Laundering Send Your Clothes To iUNDERERS AND DRY CLEANERS 6344 The Ivory Soap Soft Water Laundry Monroe County State Bank 376 Mutual China Co 372 Peerless Electric Supply Co 379 Pitman-Moore Co 382 Ransom Randolph Co 381 Red Book 383 Rendezvous 379 Robbins Shoe Co 370 Rone Music Co 375 Seville Restaurant 381 Sexton 8. Company 375 Henry C. Smither Roofing Co 384 Spink-Arms Hotel 369 Sullivan ' s 375 Varsity Pharmacy 382 Vonnegut Hardware Co 371 S. S. White Dental Mfg. Co 377 Wiles Drug Co 371 a service enterprise for students, faculty, alumni and friends of Indiana University INDIANA UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE 368 (You better turn to page 367 before you try to figure this out. ) Disregard the third diagram. It has nothing to do with this. A whirlwind season was experienced by the Chess Club and the Fencing Team, as the new speed-up program whirled past them. Parlor rugby, filling an inside straight, and rolling naturals were the best intra- mural sports around the campus during the winter season. ' . . as traditional as the Old Board Walk . . Printing from FELTUS PRINTING COMPANY For more than 50 years Bloomington Printers to Organizations of Indiana University. J Publishers The Blooiiiington Star Bloomington s Home Newspaper SPINK ARMS HOTEL 410 N. Meridian St., Indianapolis Convenient and desirable location facing new ft ar Memorial Plaza and three blocks from center of city Reasonable rates: Single $2.50 and np Double S4.00 and up also apartments for permanent guests All modern conveniences - - - Coffee Shop - Dining Rooms - Beauty Parlor - Valet and Barber Telephone — Lincoln 2361 369 COLLEGE INN EXCELLENT FOOD at Reasonable Prices FOUNTAIN— LUNCHEON— DINNER 419 E. KIRKWOOD AlwayA, _ _ _ _ • the RIGHT shoe for the OCCASION at the RIGHT price AL ROBBIXS BROWN BILT SHOE STORE East Side Square Bloomington We have the following Indiana University Alumni in our Organization E. W. Barrett ' 26 J. Dwight Peterson ' 19 Richard C. Lockton ' 30 Noble L. Biciflinger ' 33 Frank J. Parmater ' 38 Margaret Todd ' 30 C. W. Weathers ' 17 Mayburn Landgraf ' 30 Eleanor Meek ' 30 William C. Menke (on leave of absence with the U.S. Navy) ' 41 City Securities Corporation Investment Securities 417 Circle Tower Indianapolis FRATERNITY JEWELRY Official Insignia Dance Programs Club Pins Partv Favors Keys and Charms Invitations Awards Stationery Write For FREE CATALOG L . G. BALFOUR COMPANY 508 N. WASHINGTON ST. ARTHUR DIAL Bloomington, Ind. Mgr. A School of Specialization Here, students concentrate upon specific courses: drive toward definite objectives; prepare thoroughly for desirable, promising positions of their choice. This is the INDIANA BUSINESS COLLEGE of Indianapolis. The others are at Marion. Muncie. Logansport, Anderson, Kokomo. Lafayette, Columbus, Richmond and Vincennes — Ora E. Butz, President. For Bulletin, telephone or write the I. B. C. nearest you, or Fred W. Case. Principal CENTRAL BUSINESS COLLEGE Architects Builders Bldg. Penna. and Vermont Sts. Indianapolis Refresh yourself Pause at the familiar red cooler for ice-cold Coca-Cola. Its life, spar- kle and delicious taste will give you the real meaning of refreshment. 370 INDIANA UNIVERSITY PRINTING PLANT Phone 3 5 1 on the Campus Operated by the University for Printing Services To the various Departments and Allied Organizations WILES DRUG CO. 11 — llll aall The Kodak Store II llll II Telephone 5050 Style Mebchaw ibe AluKUfl KAHN CLOTHING CO, CAFETERIA And HARDWARE Supplies • for Sororities • Fraternities • and Hotels VONNEGUT HARDWARE COMPANY 402 W. Maryland St. Indianapolis CHAPTER IV POLITICS Herein is revealed and unveiled the unex- purgated INSIDE STUFF about politics on the campus of Indiana University. There are various honorary organiza- tions to which you can pledge and pay exorbitant initiation fees so that the mem- bers can enjoy banquets and picnics for another year. You will bleed the Old Folks at Home dry, but they will be proud of you, SO . . . Campus politicians are students who con- tinually pat you on the back so that they can find a good place to stick in a knife. They collect keys. They walk fast and learn first names of people. They usually don ' t ever make Phi Beta Kappa. They talk about themselves more than somewhat. They are called rods. Nobody likes them very much. There are three elections to various posi- tions on the campus. Prom Queen, Union Board and Senior Officers are the three. The most skillful maker-uppers of slates and outstanding athletes always do best in elec- tions. 371 STUDENTS CHOOSE ELLIS FLOWERS CORSAGES 9 CENTER-PIECES DANCE DECORATIONS Phone 4060 Sororities consider Prom Queenships quite the stuff. Now is the time to mention the Prom Queen who won by a neck. Anyway, junior men are led by their noses over to the Administration Building where I.S.A. or sorority sirens enlist their votes. A definite correlation between the nice- ness of coeds to junior men and the time of the Prom Queen election was seen again this year. Speaking of political parties, the parties thrown by the aspiring Queens be- fore election time are good. After basking in Prom-ised glory, the Queen has little to do except to be an ex- Prom Queen. This year the Prom Committee staged a revolutionary coup d ' etat and signed a big name band — Tommy Dorsey, trombone and all. Later in the spring the fraternity and non- fraternity men are locked in a titanic strug- gle to elect their own candidates to Union Board. There is much politicking and boress- ing about representation and prestige when the whole thing amounts to who will head the committees which will guide such campus-shaking activities as ushering, the campus calendar, programs for games, and The Gables An I.U. Institution for ten years Fountain — - Dinner — Luncheon China — Glass — Silver Gifts and Novelties for the home MUTUAL CHINA COMPANY 128-132 S. Meridian St. Indianapolis, Ind. Vitrified China Hotel Silver and Cutlery Glassware and Chrome Furniture Equipment and Supplies for Clubs, Restaurants, Hotels, Schools, Fraternities and Sororities T. M. Crutcher Dental Depot, Inc. SUPPLIES FOR DENTISTS DENTAL EQUIPMENT HUME-MANSUR BUILDING Indianapolis G. W. DAVIDSON C. E. SNYDER 372 Rich In Tradition Jlw -D-ooiuKM tcr J4 xniti ' ■J-tcnp.italitiv Modern In Convenience CLAYPOOL Indianapolis Geo. Hitz Co. WHOLESALE Fruits and Veget ables Honor Brand Frosted Foods Canned Foods INDIANAPOLIS We do any type of Rebinding Write for quotations on binding theses and semester papers. Two weeks ' service on any order THE HECKMAN BINDER! North Manchester, Indiana 373 DEXHEIMER-CARLON • • FINEST QUALITY PHOTOGRAPHY by the OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS ftht 1942 ARBUTUS • • 91 2 Odd Fellow Building - Indianapolis 374 1 Every 1 WEDNESDAY ■1 FRIDAY I SATURDAY 1 ■SUNDAY I 1 f a continuous 1 1 parade of Nationally 1 H Famous Orchestras 1 at Popular Prices J INDIANAPOLIS THE KOXK MUSIC CO, Headquarters For Everything in Music Phone 3975 Authentic University FASHIONS FOR MEN y VLLIVAN ONE-STOP MEN ' S SHOP handing out Union Board hours. All year the juniors fight for activity points by joining clubs and doing dull jobs. By going way over the limit humorously set by Board of Aeons, they have a chance to serve on the Tree Planting or Peace Pipe com- mittees during their senior years. Officers of the senior class are chosen, but they ' re like the Dodo bird in that they are so busy trying to get out of the activities they got into during their first three years in college that they never meet or function. Their names get into The Daily Student and the Arbutus, however. CHAPTER V THE SOCIAL SEASON Here ' s what you did at Indiana University in a social way. Not that we know EXACTLY what you did all the time — like at intermissions — but we do know the affairs that nicked you for tickets, corsages, taxi fares, pants or formal pressing, and so on into the bankroll. We even went to the trouble of looking them up for you, you old bothers you. HUTo SHERMAN BLEND TEAS GOOD FOOD FOR PLEASED GUESTS SEXTON 375 Freshman Frolic — Upperclassmen wolves form vicious packs at this shindig with the single idea of finding cute little, innocent freshman coeds to get pincers movements on later. Freshman coeds attend in hopes of being found by the said wolves. Union - A.W.S. Dances — On assorted gloomy Fridays, affairs are perpetrated in Alumni Hall of the Union Building. Later in the year there was free dancing in the Com- mons — except for the cost of keeping cokes on the table and nickels in the juke box. There is a balcony on the Union Building. Open Forums and Record Hours — These happen regularly, admission is free, and they are well established on the campus. Coffee Hours ■— Heh, heh, heh, your class is SO much fun, Professor Grind. On Wed- nesday afternoons students munch a free cookie and sip free coffee on the Union — which is the only time you ' ll ever beat the Union out of anything and that ' s why people go to these famous and fun-creating affairs. Sports — Despite the war and lowered athletic scholarships, sporting events take place occasionally on the campus. Games are not much good for dates — people just go there before the evening ' s main activities. Watch fiai Openina of our new FUR SALON 1 12-1 18 E. WASH. ST. INDIANAPOLIS THE BAND ALE Air- Condi tioned ▼ EXCELLENT FOODS SERVED IN A REFRESHING ATMOSPHERE Downtown DALE FERGUSON, MANAGER 9L owers by the BOUQUET SHOP Always Lovely Flowers telegraphed the world over Phone 3903 Washington at Fifth Bloomington, lnd. Compliments MONROE COUNTY STATE BANK ' The friendly bank ,f MEMBER Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 376 TO THE CLASS OF fe We welcome this opportunity to congratulate you upon the completion of your college work and extend sincere wishes for your success. • No matter where you practice, you will find S. S. White representatives and authorized dealers ready and anxious to serve you. Do not hesitate to contact these men, or write direct whenever you think we can be of assistance. S.S.WHITE DENTAL MFG. CO., PHILADELPHIA, PA. 377 ' ° m. You couldn ' t begin to measure the real benefits of Alka-Seltzer — the discomfort it can save you when common everyday ailments such as headache, upset stomach, acid indigestion, sore muscles, neuralgia or that ache-all-over feverish feeling of a cold, make you feel out of sorts with the world. Call on Alka- Seltzer! Drop one of these helpful white tablets in a glass of water — listen to it fizz — then, drink it! YOU ' LL FEEL BETTER — FAST! Alka-Seltzer ' s clear, sparkling solution is pleasant tasting, but even more important, you ' ll find it effective in its relief of distress as well as unusually prompt in its action. Keep a package of Alka-Seltzer handy always — be ready when you want relief in these common ailments. At All 2 tt€f Slated YOU ' LL FEEL BETTER WITH ALKA-SELTZER 378 THE RENDEZVOUS alumni , Atude+itl and llienaA, yosi all ocoa- Aio-nl 1 DISTINCTIVE • • • • Dance Programs • Invitations • Place Cards • Door Cards • Stationery • Favors BROWN COLLEGIATE MFG. CO. 1 EXCLUSIVE COLLEGE GOODS 1 Indianapolis Wringans new IdA lot. the, A ew- HOME JaUi- SIZE TASTI-SDUARES DELICIOUS SERVED HOT OR COLD KINGAN CO. General Offices INDIANAPOLIS, IND. Dances — Although beaten out by RCA in getting name bands, numerous campus or- ganizations try their hand at securing bands with at least a name of semi-wide country fame. Law Club Dance — Sponsored by sixty law men who managed to get dates, in spite of their conduct on the steps of ye olde Maxw ell Hall. Blanket Hop — Sounds better than it is. The blankets are for senior athletes and are purchased by the proceeds of the affair. PEERLESS ELECTRIC SUPPLY COMPANY ELECTRICAL DISTRIBUTORS Commercial anil Residential Lighting Fixtures- Universal Electric Appliances Toastmaster Products — Everhct Electric Ranges Emerson radio — Clark electric water heaters Silex Hamilton Beach appliances Complete line of electric wiring supplies 122 S. Meridian Street Indianapolis Opening of Formal Season — Gives eds a real chance to practice wearing a stiff clean shirt and forces them into buying the first corsage of the school year. Dames Ball — To go to this requires finesse, eclat, and even some cagey han- dling of the coed who finally decides to give the ed an invitation and then proceeds to get out of as much taxi fare, etc., as pos- sible. Prom — One late night plus big name band equals money plus money plus money. Vacations — Here is the best social func- tion of all. It is going home and sloughing off the whole mess you ' ve made of college. It happens at Thanksgiving, Christmas, and on the few classless Saturday week ends. Auditorium Series — If you don ' t go class conscious and uppity after concerts, ballets, and operas, you may attend the University ' s latest added attraction. Admission is pretty steep and so are the rear balcony seats. Shows Downtown — Which you are usual- ly stuck with. Friday night cinema is stinky but Saturday ' s is decidedly better. 379 POST-GRADUATE COURSE This is a good lesson to learn now for use later. The printed -7ethotp r ese rv es y o Urmemori : ofd| ment of H ° ' mStrUments of Passions, of manage- ment of adm,n,strat,on. In fact, wherever you go from here you II have use — and need — for these instruments. When you do, choose them well. Judge them as you have your college. Pick the institution that can give you complete, cor- related, tested results. As an institution of creative printing, Keller-Crescent combines a complete co-ordinated graphic arts service under one roof, one responsibility. Obviously, its correlation of creation and production makes Keller-Cres- N cent not only the best source of quality in printing, (witness your Arbutus this year), but also of economy. Keep that in mind. It might make you a genius with the new boss who hasn ' t yet discovered our way of doing things. HtftuMfSffNf CO. I % ■■■■■■■EVANSVILLE, IND A COMPLETE SERVICE UNDER ONE ROOF • Research Publicity Public Relations Sales Promotion Advertising Copy Art Photo-Engraving Offset-Lithography Process Color Printing Letterpress Printing Binding 380 Booth Sitting — This is the all-campus so- cial activity. Sitting — just sitting — is ex- cused by the name Joeing, but also can be called on your duffing. CHAPTER VI BIG STORIES NOT HAPPENING Big stories that did not happen — Lana Turner coming to the Blanket Hop. Activities limitations. Speed-up program applied to Commons service, checks from home, and romance. Anti-necking campaign. Count Basie for the Skull and Crescent dance. Artie Shaw at the Interfraternity Ball. The Interfraternity Ball. Spring rush dances. The last man on campus. Student government. CHAPTER VII SPRING AND LOVER IMPULSES The successful Lothario or B.M.O.C. — big man on campaigns — has something lined up for spring. During the year he lavishes single gardenias and twenty-cent cabs on the object of his intentions until she breaks down and decides that it will be just as well Jd.utic.kina at SEVILLE RESTAURANT INDIANAPOLIS ' SMARTEST 7 NORTH MERIDIAN ST. THERE ARE MANY UNCERTAINTIES AHEAD! Yet we know that eventually most of you will, when the times permit, begin the practice of dentistry. When that time arrives we want you to remember that we carry in stock and on display, a complete line of the different makes of equipment for your comparison and study. THE RANSOM RANDOLPH CO. INDIANAPOLIS 381 Ike NATHAN HALE • Gifts • Jewelry • Stationery • Greeting Cards • Student Supplies ACROSS FROM THE ADMINISTRATION BLDG. not worrying about having a date to every- thing. During this year — as formerly — the men who worked hard on one or two prospects were the most successful. This has been set down in a decidedly well-established prin- ciple: The size of the field of coeds upon which your social efforts are expended is inversely proportional to the effectiveness of your campaign in the field of romance. Out of these campus contacts, many times very close contacts, have grown a multitude of pinnings and a marriage or two. VARSITY PHARMACY on the campus Drugs Fountain Student Supplies Phone 5018 PlTMAN-M Company 382 Every Student Should Own a Copy of the RED BOOK A Complete Directory of Indiana University One of the Many Services of the University Y.M.C.A. CHAPTER VIM STUDY This is Rexstrew Kirxbuddle. He is a trans- fer student from a great upstate institution, Purdue University. He is studying. John P. Moon and Roborf A. Lucas Reliable Campus Agents for a Reliable Fraternity Jeweler MAXWELL C. LANG 708 TEST BUILDING INDIANAPOLIS Go-tnpii+nentd. al CREAMERY COMPANY DEPENDABLE MILK PRODUCTS SINCE 1912 IDEAL LAUNDRY tf-itit lit • SERVICE • SANITATION • S AV 1 N G ADDRESS PHONE 12th AND PARK AVE. 2117 383 CHAPTER IX FAREWELL TO SENIORS It ' s too bad you must leave. You ' ll be leaving that fine old speed-up program with its six days of classes and the beloved eight o ' clocks (or seven o ' clocks) every morning. You ' re leaving those swell physical fit classes where you did forty-five push-ups. And there won ' t be any more interesting pro- ficiencies, comprehensives, and finals. Don ' t you cry to think of leaving smoke- ups, 10:30 nights, and draft letters? It ' s out into the cold, Pearl Harbor world for you. You ' re graduated, no less. CHAPTER X FINAL EXAMINATION The Theta table is in the ( 1 ) northwest, (2) southwest, (3) southeast, corner of the Commons. Bob Gates is ( 1 ) president of the Eucli- dean Circle, (2) editor of the I.S.A. Outlook, (3) secretary of the Flame Club, (4) big- footed. Jl-ea cjfUGAte ti, . . . . . . Ut 9 tdia ia FOR • Medical Student Supplies • Hospitals, Physicians and Sick Room Supplies • Trusses, Elastic Hosiery, Abdom- inal Supporters, Braces and Orthopedic Appliances AKRON SURGICAL HOUSE, Inc. 221 North Pennsylvania Indianapolis HENRY C. ROOFING SM1THER COMPANY Reputable Roofing and Sheet Metal Contractors since 1868 430 S. Meridian St., Indianapolis FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF BLOOM1NGTOIS it For Defense buy it it United States Defense it it Stamps and Bonds it MEMBER OF FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM MEMBER OF FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION Bloomington , s Bank since 1871 The Bookstore ( 1 ) is a non-profit organi- zation, (2) is the home of a famous owl, (3) should have three gold balls hanging out in front for a descriptive sign. Bridges across the Jordan (1 ) need better lighting, (2) save getting your feet wet, (3) have far too much night parking. A convertible is (1) the secret of social success, (2) the secret of social success, (3) the secret of social success. True and False: Housemothers hear nothing, tell nothing, see nothing, and forget to turn out lights. No fraternities or sororities have any mort- gages on their houses. Athletes do not discuss Keats, Shake- speare, and Shelley in their spare time. All coeds observe the eleven o ' clock phone rule, and never talk any later. Rarely is there less than one hundred per cent attendance at eight o ' clock classes. This is a good book. APPENDIX This has been removed. 384 INDEX A Aboscal, Manuel C 125 Abousamra, Roger J 107, 285 Acacia Fraternity 140 Ackerson, Rusty 200 Adams, George P 285 Adams, Ruth M 285 Addison, Robert J 94, 285 Adelman, Nathan 171 Adkins, Joe 175 Agnew, Robert 126 Ahlering, George H 163, 285 Ahif, Lloyd 107, 110 Aiken, Nevin 341 Akin, Robert 172 Albertson, Enid Marion 285 Albright, Willard 100, 144 Albright, William 125 Alcorn, Quentin 140 Aldrich, Wendell R 148, 259, 285 Alexander, Jack 148 Alexander, Jane 195 Alford, Leonard 285 Aliman, John 108 Allen, Frank E 273 Allen, Gordon M 107, 110 Allen, Jack 148 Allen, Marie Josephine 133 Allen, Willoughby 112, 200, 285 Alleyne, Laurance 244 Allgire, Mildred 118 Ailing, Charles 126 Allison, Max 125 Aliman, John 26, 43, 144 Alpha Chi Omega Sorority 180 Alpha Chi Sigma 102 Alpha Delta Pi Sorority 183 Alpha Lambda Delta 101 Alpha Omicron Pi 184 Alpha Phi Omega 115 Alpha Tou Omega Fraternity 142 Alward, John Haney 326, 338 Amos, Marilyn Frances 130 Amster, Henry 167 Anderson, Carl 228 Anderson, Don 140 Anderson, Edward J 60 Anderson, E. Laurence 285 Anderson, John 148 Anderson, Muriel 200, 285 Anderson, Richard M 125 Anderson, Robert 52, 126 Anderson, Robert Dugger 73, 86, 91, 164, 218, 259 Anderson, Robert L 97, 156 Anderson, Rodney 57 Anderson, Vachel 140 Andres, Ernie 225 Andrews, E. Marie 195 Angel, Nickolas V 84, 122, 125 Ankenbruck, Martin 163 Antibus, Margaret 191 Anthony, Philip 339 Antrim, James 82, 179, 285 Appenzeller, Harry 140 Applegate, A. Earl 326, 341 Applegate, Alice Virginia 130, 285 Applegate, Edwin 129 Arbogast, Lou Alice 285, 344 Archer, John 249 Archer, Milton 147, 285 Archibald, Joanna 112, 285 Archibald, Margaret M 130, 131 Ardapple, Warren 159 Armbruster, William R 125, 175, 285 Armstrong, Frank 151 Armstrong, Lois 76, 89, 92, 285 Armstrong, Mary Jane 285, 358 Arnold, Katherine Durham 191, 285 Arnold, Robert Walter 148, 231, 285 Arnold, Sarah 192 Aronhalt, Richard 155 Arthur, Julia Ann 192 Arthur, Thomas 351 Artin, Emil 104 Arvin, Joe P ... 129 Ashby, Marianna 46, 101, 200 Ashley, Edwin 151 Alterberry, Keith 140 Atz, John 151 Augustine, Bonnie Jo 130 Aukerman, James B 94, 107, 110, 285 Aungst, Betty Jane 133, 285 Austin, Robert Lee 117, 125, 168, 285 Autrey, Allan 285 A. W. S 75 Ax, Elaine 44, 49, 79, 92, 192 Azar, Alex 126 B Babcock, Robert A 351, 352 Bachmann, Arnold J 326, 340 Badger, Jacqueline 358 Badger, Leonila 76, 84, 285 Baer, Sylvan 171 Baerncopf, David 97, 100 Bagal, Seymour M 125 Bagner, Robert 167 Bahney, Robert 164 Bailey, Albert L 164, 285 Bailey, Dick 155 Bailey, Gary 285 Bailey, John W 80, 94, 107 Bailey, John B 109 Bailey, Paula 188 Bailey, Rosemary 112, 199 Bailey, Seavey 144 Baker, Betty 192 Baker, Dan 40, 125 Baker, James 125 Baker, Kathryn 285 Baker, William M 125 Baldwin, Fred 348, 349 Baldwin, Garza, Jr 91, 155, 285 Baldwin, John J 109, 115, 147, 285 Baldwin, Robert Ashton 107, 110, 285 Bales, Martha Ellen 133, 285 Ball, Loraine 196 Ballard, Norma J 195, 285 Ballard, Robert J 338 Balogh, Julia A 79 Bane, Juliana 184 Bannister, Dan 91, 152 Bannon, Bill 164 Baron, Charles 285, 336 Barclay, Robert W 160 Barick, Besse 134 Barker, Beverly 50 Barker, Carmen L 133 Barker, Dorothy 183 Barnett, George 179 Barnett, Robert 26 Barnhill, Charles J 117, 285 Barr, Thurl 126 Barron, Katherine 101 Barskin, Doovid ...44, 171, 285 Barten, Velma Jean 130 Barth, Kitty Lou 130, 191 Bartlett, Becky .60, 101, 133 Bartlett, Robert C 147 Bartley, Edward 68, 73, 91, 108, 160, 285 Bartling, Jeanice 184, 285 Bash, Carolyn B 200 Bash, Wallace E 326 Bassett, Margaret Ann 326, 337 Batchelor, James W. 80, 285 Bates, Betty ...52, 59, 184 Bates, Charles E 129, 286 Bates, Dean Robert 276 Batty, Marion 188 Bauer, Virginia Lee 130 Bough, William R 129, 286 Baughman, Thelma Reed..... 286 Baum, Dick 172 Baxter, John A 97, 176 Bayless, Barbara 200 Beal, Charles 151 Beall, Helen 326, 337 Beasley, Herschel B 109, 286 Beaver, Charles G 286 Beaver, Norman 339 Beck, Betty 184 Beck, Don 152 Beck, Emil Charles ...73, 94, 107, 110, 286 Beck, Evart 339 Beck, Morris 140 Beck, Robert A 168 Becknell, Jack 115, 175 Beckwith, William 115 Bedwell, Sally 192 Bedwell, Winston 94, 102, 286 Begert, Curt G 143 Begley, Joe W 129 Behrens, Edith Elsie 286, 344 Beitman, Betty Jane... 203 Bell, Ed 234 Bell, Gloria E 133 Bell, Leon 147 Belles, Dale 144 Benckart, Robert 97, 168, 239 Benckart, William E 168 Bender, Keith 160 Benedict, Charles D . 176 Benenati, Casper 126 Bennett, J. B 326, 339 Benninghoff, Marjorie 187, 286 Benton, Blanche A 286 385 Benward, Bruce 100, 286 Bercaw, Barbara 54, 191 Berges, Esther 358 Berkeley, Ryan 125 Berkey, Lucy Marian 286 Berman, Edward 129 Berman, Robert N 347, 354 Berman, Ruth 286 Bermand, Jean 286 Bernard, Alice 200 Bernard, Jean 192 Bernard, Nelle 43, 192 Berndt, Cottie 164 Bernhardt, Robert 108, 160 Berrier, Georgia Belle 344 Berry, Paul 155 Besing, Beulah 137 Besing, Evelyn E 112 Best, Jane 207 Best, Morris 94, 129, 286 Best, Steve 122 Besundee, Elliott 125 Beta Theta Pi 144 Bethea, Robert 286, 341 Bibler, Bob 125 Biddinger, Dale 172 Biddle, James W 175 Biddle, Nancy Ward... 89, 92, 192, 286 Biddle, Ward G 273, 275 Bill, Robert 326, 339 Billerbeck, Arlene 187 Billings, Dorothy J 184, 286 Billings, Elmer R 286, 341 Billman, Lionell 46, 151 Bingham, Robert 179 Bireley, Betty Jean 207 Bixler, Dean 160 Bjorklund, J. Harmon 53, 326 Black, David 140, 286 Blackburn, Robert Gerald 129, 286 Blackmore, Mary 286 Blackwell, Richard B 109, 159 Blake, Albert 84 Blake, Louis 126 Blakely, Raymond Charles 109, 286 Bland, George 26 Blasengym, Ginny 191 Blassaras, Crist 100, 176 Blew, Mary Anne 57, 207 Blick, Milton H 99 Blickensderfer, June Ellen 130 Blocker, Clyde E 156 Bloom, George R 326, 338 Bloom, William M 117, 286 Blue Key 86 Blue, Samuel 287 Board of Aeons 68 Board of Standards 71 Board of Trustees 273 Bobbitt, Jane 192 Bobele, Pegge 203 Bobilya, Claude 175 Bockstahler, Theodore E...80, 102, 168, 287 Bockstege, Herman Henry, Jr 287 Boden, Robert L 148, 259 Boehm, Dale 255 Boehne, John W 102, 160, 287 Boerger, Victor 338 Bogart, Felix 63, 167, 287 Boggy, Dale H 287 Bohannon, Betty 444, 192, 287 Bohnert, Margaret Ann 188, 287 Bollenbacher, John 160 Bonath, Betty 184, 287 Bonaventura, Angelo 287, 338 Bond, D. Audrey 133, 287 Bond, Jim 152 Bonecutter, Harold 82, 156 Boner, George 1 25 Bonham, Joe 140 Bonsib, John 160 Booher, Craig 143, 287 Boone, Bette 187 Boonshot, Margaret Anna 287 Boost, Albert Thomas 148 Bordon, Ruth 71 Boren, Margaret 195 Borman, William J 354 Borneman, Bud 172, 287 Borough, Paul 168 Bortner, Norman Larue 176 Boruff, Bill 175 Bosse, Gil 172 Bossett, Robert 26, 163 Bothwell, George 255 Botner, Muriel M 2 87 Bottorff, Dorothy Ellen 112, 199, 287 Bouchard, Naomi Bonnie 76, 287 Boughan, Virginia 191 Bowen, Betty Lou 130 Bowen, Mark 100, 107 Bowen, Otis 326, 338 Bowers, Dale R 175 Bowlby, Alma L 133 Bowles, Donald 129 Bowman, Thomas S 168 Bowman, Wanda Marie 130, 204 Boyd, Clarence E 340 Boyd, Dr. David A 349 Bradner, Roger 129 Brady, Tom 172 Bragalone, Al 91, 179, 235, 287 Brallier, Elvin Nash 26, 126 Brammer, Betty Suzanne 344 Brammer, Harry 129 Braun, Marian 187 Brandt, Robert D 26 Bretz, Charles R 168 Brickley, George 107, 179, 287 Bridge, Hal 129, 159, 287 Bridgeford, Robert 176 Bridges, Richard 126 Bridges, William Lloyd 73, 94 Brier, Myrtle 76, 287 Briggs, James 159, 175, 254, 287 Bright, Robert 44, 109 Briley, Laura Kathryn 110, 112, 287 Brink, John C 326, 336 Briscoe, Herman T 275 Britton, Welbon D 326, 339 Broadbent, Peter E 109, 287 Brook, Roberts F 156 Brockman, Wilfred 288 Brockway, Merrill 159 Brodhecker, Bob 159 Broide, Macy 1 171 Broner, Bob 249 Bronson, Nadyne S 133 Bronstein, Bernard R 100, 171 Bronstein, Edward 354 Brookbank, Jack F 109, 288 Brooks, Merton 126 own, Agnes Patricia 112, 200, n, Allen n Bemice 43, 76, n, Betty Lou n, Bill own, Chilton 26, 54, 100, own, Edward own, Eugene W 140, , Howard I, James 151, i, June 41, 42, 200, 210, i. Marguerite 59, i, Mary Ann i, Robert E i, Robert V , Sam own, Tom i, Virginia owne, George O., Jr ownell, Beryl Ann 57, 65, 76, 92, 196, owning, Joan Jane 130, owning, Yolanda D uce, Patsy uner. Bob unner, Clarence E 255, unner, Raymond B yan, Alice yan, Dr. William Lowe yan, Franklin A 326, House Bryan, Robert Bublitz, Robert H 107, 110, Buchanan, Elizabeth Buck, Walter Buckingham, Richard E Buckmaster, Margie 41, 180, 210, Buchmeier, Joseph A 326, Buckner, George Buckout, Donald Buckingham, Richard E Bullock, Robert Bundy, Barbara Bundy, Charles Boyd 104, Bundy, Merle 325, 326, Bunger, Len ..48, 86, 108, 168, 218, Burch, James R Burdette, Harold F 326, Burger, Billy Burgman, Max Burket, Kathryn Lucille Burkhart, Reginald Burks, Ally N 347, 348, Burnett, Robert E Burns, Jean Eleanor 50, Burns, Paul Earland 326, Burruss, Robert Bursley, Justin Burton, Helen 50, 118, Busard, Helen F Bush, Aulden K 348, 349, 352, Bush, Jack Leslie 107, 110, Buskirk, Allen Bussard, Frank W Butler, Dorothy Butt, Julia Butz, Helene Buzolich, Margaret 134, Byers, John Byers, John G 57, 63, 151, Byrne, Grace 283 144 195 344 125 159 125 288 159 255 213 191 130 125 129 123 168 192 148 288 192 133 134 159 288 109 183 4 338 125 126 125 103 159 326 240 340 168 129 338 126 344 288 339 231 288 339 125 155 288 288 355 288 288 339 29 129 184 200 357 288 164 156 187 288 288 288 155 288 196 386 Byrne, Martha 101 Byrne, Shirley 289 c Cabage, Eugene 288 Cahn, Sidney 54, 97, 171 Calbeck, Marion J 148, 288 Caldwell, Mary Elizabeth 196 Cali, John James 147 Call, Dean 159, 288 Cameron, Joe 155 Campbell, Betty Jane... 188, 288 Campbell, Carolyn 191, 288 Campbell, Kathryn E 337 Campbell, Sam W 338 Campbell, Virginia 204 Canaday, R. Burton 164 Canatsey, Ruth Clayton 133 Cannon, Robert Lee 326, 339 Caplitz, Israel 126 Carey, Ruth Alice 180 Carlisle, Joe 125 Carlson, Edward 155, 288 Carmichael, Mary Lou .. 180 Carmony, Warren 151 Carnahan, Bob 84 Carnes, Paul 288 Carpenter, Courtland 159 Carpenter, Fred 168 Carpenter, Harry F 340 Carpenter, Mont 144 Carr, Janet 289 Carroll, William 125 Carson, Irene 207 Carson, Mary A 83, 92, 188, 289 Carter, Fred 172 Carter, James J 164 Carter, John J 110, 289 Cartwright, William A 129 Case, Fred 24, 48, 68, 73, 86, 94, 220, 283, 289 Cassady, Martha Pat 137 Cassady, Patricia 191 Cassidy, Bernadette 196 Cassidy, William 129 Caton, John E 336 Catron, Virginia 184 Catt, Phyllis Kathleen 191 Cattelle, Marjorie 199 Cauble, Martha 195 Caudill, Milton 148 Cavanaugh, Emma Lou 112, 180 Covin, William 159 Cawn, Sylvia 203 Chadwick, Rex 175, 289 Chaille, Peggy 289 Chalfant, Elsie 30, 79, 92, 184 Chambers, Walter 164 Chamness, Miss Ivy 61 Chandler, Leland 126 Chaney, William L 125 Chappell, John 117, 148, 289 Chapel, William 1 26, 99 Chase, Dudley 126 Chasman, Paul 125 Chastain, Wallace 26 Chattin, Bill 144 Chottin, Robert N 143, 289, 339 Cheadle, Carl 107, 143, 231 Chelton, Vernon 256 Chenoweth, William A 164 Chesbro, Charles Chester, Margery Chester, Roger 172, Chi Omega Chivingto n, Paul 97, 100, Christena, Don Christiansen, Clyde C Claman, Gloria . .60, 79, 84, Clark, James R Clark, Kenneth Clark, Robert 351, Clarke, Phyllis Clary, James E Clary, Keith Clay, Elizabeth Jean Clegg, Robert Clements, Jean Clerkin, John G Clevenger, Z. A Clifford, Charles Cline, Barbara Cline, Mary Lee Clinton, Evelyn E Clunie, Charles R Cobb, Roy Cody, Helen 79, Cogan, John M 97, 164, Cohee, Margery Dean 184, Cohe Alan Cohn, Muriel Cole, Elisabeth 192, Cole, Kate Cole, Sam Coleman, Glen William Coleman, Harold 167, 249, Colglazier, J. W 102, 172, Colip, William L Collegiate Chamber of Commerce. Collette, Robert W 109, Collier, Kenneth W Collignon, Bob 109, Collins, Evangeline R Collins, Ralph Collins, Robert 110, Combs, Albert Ronald 109, Combs, Louis Combs, William Compton, Betty J Compton, Bill Compton, David W 109, Compton, George L 326, Compton, James Cone, Jack Conn, H. Louis 152, Conn, Janet Conner, Cornelia Doris Conne Conne Conne Eileen Eleanor 46, 101, Cook, George D.. Cook, Harold 107, Cook, Marjory Cook, William Cookson, Louise 43, Cookson, Ruth Cookson, Thomas Coon, William 143, Coonan, Bill 114, 163, Cooper, Charlotte 74, 79, 92, Cooper, Mildred Mae 184, 176 200 289 187 172 126 159 130 143 126 355 1 33 289 129 130 126 191 117 259 159 195 184 289 156 129 130 255 289 125 137 240 195 155 289 289 239 289 81 175 109 290 133 290 290 290 254 356 204 144 290 336 148 155 290 1 83 3 53 207 187 184 84 176 110 204 144 200 200 273 290 255 195 290 Cooper, Ralph 107, 255 Cooper, Virginia 184 Corbin, John 29, 155 Corcoran, Suzanne Marie 180 Coriden, Guy 129 Corn, Dorothy 134 Cornwell, Anne Marie 290 Corter, Sue 71, 81, 112, 290 Cory, Walter 126 Cosgrove, Rita Mary 101 Cosgrove, Tom 82, 159, 290 Cositore, Vincent L . 156 Cotton, Barbara Jean 290 Council of Fraternity Presidents 82 Cowan, Bob 175 Cowdrill, Robert 129 Cox, Elvera 290 Cox, Keith William 24, 26, 94, 108, 110, 115, 290 Cox, Robert D 175 Cox, Sebra Ellen 118, 290 Coyne, Nathaniel 167 Craig, Dick 250 Craig, Marilyn 130 Craig, Mary Alice 326 Craig, Patsy 192 Craig, Rueben Allen 168 Craig, Richard 168 Craig, Robert A 326, 336 Cramer, Herb 24, 109, 164 Crandall, Martha L 326, 337 Craven, Mary 184 Cravens, Dan 159 Cravens, Joe, 144 Cravens, Mary Ruth 191, 290 Crawford, Dean William H 346 Crawley, John 151 Creason, Mary J 133, 290 Crews, Robert C 107, 110 Cripe, William H 290 Crites, Robert 255 Crodian, James R 155 Croker, Don R 99, 125 Cronin, William 147, 255 Crooke, Donald 140 Crookes, Phoebe Jane 50 Crooks, James W..... 143 Cropp, George 255 Croxton, William 143 Culbertson, Dr. C. G... 358 Culbertson, Robert C 164 Cummings, Vera Rowena 290 Cummins, Jiggs 50 Cunningham, Margaret 188 Curfman, Rex 140 Curl, Robert F 148, 289 Curran, John H 109, 290 Current, Kathryn Adele 184 Curey, Robert 46, 151 Currie, Byron 290 Curry, James 290 Curtis, Donna Jean 130 Cusack, Robert 151 Cutler, Marjory 191 Cutler, Robert 159 Cutshall, Barbara 195 D Dafler, Richard E 117 Dahl, Jeannette 290 387 Doiley, Marjorie 50 Daily Student 56 Dallie, Don 163 Danch, John R 117 Daniels, David Scott 68, 84, 94, 290 Daniels, Nycletha 291 Danielson, Donald C...86, 91, 172, 225, 291 Darn, Robert H 171, 291 Dant, J. Kelly 164 Darkus, Clarence E 125 David, Maurice 176 Davidson, Burchard R 291 Davis, Betty A 133 Davis, Betty Rae 195 Davis, Carolyn 199 Davis, Carolyn 291 Davis, Catherine 184 Davis, Don 68, 81, 91, 108, 110, 120, 143, 283, 291 Davis, Gail 358 Davis, Harold 167 Davis, Helen L 112, 180, 291 Davis, Hellen 71, 76, 187 Davis, Jack 152 Davis, Joseph P 143, 291, 326 Davis, Rae 184 Davis, Richard Merrill 164, 291 Davis, Robert McAfee 143 Davis, Ruth 133, 291 Davis, William Richard.. 160, 331, 351 Dawson, Kent 29 Deafenbaugh, Jack 179 Deahl, Eloise 180, 291 Deol, Russell 179, 234 Dean, Robert 168 Deane, Elizabeth 46, 74, 84, 101 DeBruler, Edna M 118 Debruler, Evelyn May 291 Deck, George 172 Decker, Martha Prentiss 130, 191 Dee, Bernadine 203, 291 DeFries, John Jacob, Jr 336 Dehne, Elma 344 DeLanoy, Ken 164 DeLawter, Pierre 324, 326, 339 Deleon, Rose R 133 Delta Chi 147 Delta Delta Delta 188 Delta Gamma 191 Delta Tau Delta 148 Delta Upsilon 151 Del Vecchio, Anthony 163 Demmary, Barbara 188 Denman, Robert W 125 Denny, Forrest L 327, 339 Denny, Mary Jane.. 133 Denny, Melvin 339 Dental School Student Council 352 Denton, Edward 244 Denton, Irving 81, 125 Derby, Richard E 140, 291 Desmond, Al 125 Detmer, Delbert 29 Detraz, Pauline M 327, 337 Detroy, William P 140 Devine, Dorothy 204 Devol, Mary Joan 291 Dewar, James 172 Dewar, Shirley 191, 291 Dewberry, Joe F 143 Dewend, Helen Jo 130 Dickman, Paul 155 Dickerson, Betty Jeanne 292, 337 Dickey, John 125 Dicks, Harold 159 Dickson, Jean 52, 200, 292 Diem, Hal 163 Dierking, Dorothy 204 Diggins, Vance 176 Dilley, Dick 151 Dillon, Ruth 184 Dills, Gordon 147 Dilts, Robert 327, 338 Dimond, Grey 168, 292 Diness, Loretta 203, 292 Dippell, Ruth V 292 Dittmer, Thomas L 327, 339 Dixon, G. Geraldine 292 Dixon, Ruth 50, 292 Dobson, Doris 292 Dodd, Robert Darr 292, 336 Doerr, Edward L 102 Dolen, William Kenneth 147 Dolaway, Earl 176, 232 Dombroski, Bob 156 Donnell, Robert D 160 Doolittle, Nancy Edith 130 Dorton, Lorraine 292 Douglas, Anne 57, 58, 204, 292 Douglas, William 339 Dowden, Dick 151 Downard, Leland Franklin 292, 339 Doxtator, Robert J 292 Doyle, Elisabeth Joan 59, 191, 292 Doyle, James 97, 152 Doyle, Mary Patricia 191 Dragon ' s Head 120 Drake House 125 Draper, John 172 Drebert, Catherine E 133 Drebin, Harold 171 Drescher, Morgan 50 Dressel, Betty Lillian 292 Driver, Hal 140, 244 Droege, John 126 Droit, Pat 55, 180 Duckwall, Ralph . 147 Dudas, Milan 129, 292 Duffner, Robert J 293, 341 Duffy, Pat 293, 336 Dugger, William 129, 293 Dukes, Charles W 176 Dukes, Joe 338 Duncan, Frances M 195 Duncan, Margaret 344 Dunker, Don 254, 255 Dunlap, Alan 43, 100, 164 Dunlop, Walter 352, 356 Dunn, Wallie 175 Durham, James A 155, 293 Durick, Jack W 129 Dwight, Barbara 358 Dye, Bill 172 Dyer, Lucile 188, 293 E Eads, Harry N 148 Earley, Horace F 152, 225 Eason, John C 108, 293 East, Fred 140 Easterday, Ed 102, 168 Eberhardt, Dorothy 358 Eberly, Karl C, Jr 164 Edinger, Edward F 99, 100 Elder, Bill 250 Edmiston, John 84, 125 Edmondson, Dean C. E 276 Edwards, Edward H 31, 125 Edwards, Leonard 144 Edwards, Richard 99 Edwards, Ruthe A 79, 83, 92, 183 Eggers, Norman 144, 293 Eggleston, George W 359 Egly, Bill 46, 84, 125 Egner, Walter J 293 Eicher, Josephine 199 Eicholz, John 46, 126 Eiliff, Tony 84 Einikis, Johanna 293 Eisinger, Roger W., Jr 160, 293 Elkins, June 180, 293 Ellenbogen, Eric 167 Eller, Ann 192 Ellerbush, Virginia 112 Ellett, John, Jr. 100 Elliott, Colin 327, 338 Elliott, Ed 126 Elliott, Howard 151 Elliott, M. Sherry 199 Elliott, Robert 109, 172 Elliott, Sara 192 Ellis, Janet 188 Ellis, John 175 Ellis, Richard 237 Ellison, Robert D 151, 159, 293 Elmore, Martha Anne 130 Elmore, Robert L 168 Eisner, Mary A 20, 79, 92, 293 Elster, Carl F 293 Emahiser, Mary 83, 92, 112, 207, 293 Enders, Shirlee 20, 130 Endicott, Junior 156 Endress, Gene 107 Endwright, John R 125 Englehart, Richard H 148 English, Richard 179 Ennis, Jerome 167 Enoch, June 180 Eppley, William 175 Epstein, Stanley E . 354 Erdmann, Bob 159 Erdmann, John W 100, 151 Erhardt, Dan L 160 Eric, Edelson S 359 Ernst, Clifford 339 Esarey, Bill 144 Esarey, Jeanette 192, 293 Eschbach, Jesse 144 Esmon, John Thomas 129, 293 Espie, John 26 Essex, Betty Lou 133 Estill, Garold 31 Etcheson, Tinker 82, 147, 293 Ettl, Edward J 336 Eutzler, E. D 179 Evans, Horace L 293 Evans, Jon 152 Evans, Louis E 359 Evans, Marjory 293, 358 Everitt, Thomas B 129 F Failing, Patricia 195 388 Faith, Ira 293 Faller, Carl 126 Falls, John D 179, 293 Falwell, Lawrence - 256 Fargo, Margaret 46, 48, 89, 180, 283, 293 Faris, Donald 84, 99, 108, 110 Farley, Robert Dale 293 Farner, Jim 168 Farquharson, Art 110, 151 Farris, Jack 147, 293 Feeger, Charles A 24, 86, 91, 108, 164, 293 Feighner, John R 91, 109, 160, 294 Feinloch, Jack 53, 348, 349, 354 Feldman, Chester 104 Feldman, Martin 347, 348 Felix, Pat 180 Felkins, Ruthe Joanna 294 Feltus, Paul L 273 Fenneman, Robert J 327, 338 Ferguson, C. Lewis 97, 143 Ferguson, William B 152, 341 Ferrey, Ed 57, 63, 86, 168, 294 Fetterly, Martha 54, 101, 200 Feutz, Bette 184 Fiedler, Russell 114, 294 Figel, Gene 155 Fike, Mary 40, 200 Fileff, Tony 125 Fine, Shirley Winifred 203, 294 Finkbiner, Charles 29 Finnell, Ann 191 Finney, Charles 147 Firebaugh, Tania 137 Fischer, James ....81, 176, 231, 294 Fisher, Ralph 176 Fisher, Richard L ..29, 107, 110, 160 Fisher, Rita Ann 195 Fisher, Theresa H 131, 294 Fischvogt, Verna 294 Fitzpatrick, James S 294, 341 Fitzpatrick, J. Lloyd 117, 294 Fitzpatrick, Mary Jean 134 Flack, Toney 46 Flame Club 94 Flaningam, Lucile 192 Fleehart, Janet 192 Flox, Harold 126 Flox, Saul 126 Foland, James 159 Foley, Anna 118 Foley, George 148 Folt z, Richard 155 Ford, Annette 191, 294 Ford, G. Robert .. 152 Ford, Lee 42, 155, 225 Fordyce, Bette 204 Foreman, Warren E 143 Forrest, William M. 155 Forsyth, J. C 91, 140, 294 Foss, Betty 46, 48, 84, 294 Foster, Dean 152, 294 Fothas, Bill 129 Fountain, Mary Louise 294 Fournier, Winston C...57, 58, 63, 94, 294 Foust, Shirley lone.. 344 Fowler, Thomas 109, 176 Fox, Clyde 26, 140, 225 Fox, J. Warren 80, 82, 140 Fox, Mike 46 Fox, Milton 167 Fox, Orville 117, Fox, William Foxworthy, Donald T France, Richard B 107, 168, Frank, Robert 53, 91, 120, 175, Frank, Toots .200, Franklin, Cecil Charles, Jr 29, 114, 225, Frankli. Ernest James Robert D 107, Fraser, Barbara Fraser, Elizabeth 76, 103, Fraser, William S Froze, Vernon D 99, 100, 109, Frazee, Charman 71, 76, 101, Freed, Betty Freed, Vera Freeland, Charlotte Freeland, Hugh 117, French, Nan Fresen, Robert Frey, Bill 91, 159, Friedland, Fanny Frigge, Pat 41, 192, 210, Frisk, Al Froberg, Ruth Froeschke, Margaret Frohman, Charles Frommer, Jud Frommer, Lawrence Fry, Mary Elizabeth Fry, Raymond Fuchs, Mary Fultz, Lotus H Funk, John .R Funk, Louis Funk, Mary Jane Funk, Neil E 97, 151 Furst, Harold 351, 352 Futterknecht, James 99 .180, 102, 152, .59, 171, 295 164 295 295 295 295 250 327 295 159 191 191 148 295 192 200 295 295 295 199 129 244 203 213 249 183 295 295 295 171 130 126 180 26 129 151 192 244 357 126 Gable, Jack 129, 295 Gaddis, James 97, 108, 140 Gaddis, John 168 Godient, Walter 46 Gaff, Jane 74, 92, 180, 295 Gall, Joe 172 Gallinatti, John 148 Gallivan, James P 155 Gallmeyer, Thomas 97, 100, 168 Galloway, Patricia Jean 130 Gambino, Lucien A. W 125 Gans, Frank 160 Ganz, Saul 125 Garber, J. D 129 Gardner, George 231 Gardner, Kenneth 168 Gardner, Ned E 50, 295 Gardner, William F 176 Garretson, Marsena M 295 Garrott, Glen B 295 Gast, Robert 175 Gaston, Robert A 143, 225 Gatch, Dean Willis D 324 Gates, Robert 48, 73, 82 86, 91, 99, 108, 120, 126, 168, 283, 295 Gaulke, David W 327 Gaunt, David 144 Gaunt, Everett W 336 Gavit, Susanne 195 Gayle, Sheldon 160 Geisler, Carol Lee ... 359 Gellman, Morton A. 129 Gemmer, Robert 140 Gerding, William J 338 Germain, George Daniel 114 Gery, Helen 180 Gettinger, Bob 117 Getz, Raymond Joseph, Jr 327, 341 Gibson, Barbara 200 Gierz, Ruth 196 Giese, Jill 184 Giesman, Elsie 204 Gifford, Jeanne 92, 188, 295 Gilchrist, John W 348 Gill, Phyllis 295 Gillespie, Jane 192, 295 Gillfillan, Thomas 148 Gilliatt, Paul 26, 31, 295 Ging, Virgil 175 Gitken, Bill 356 Gittleman, Wilson 171, 295 Givan, George 55, 97, 175 Giant, Bill 176 Glenn, Helen 65, 183 Glick, Eugene 167 Glick, Marian Jean 58, 65 Glick, Marjorie Helen 130, 131, 295 Glogas, Marygold 130, 203 Glossbrenner, Emily 192 Glover, Gerrie 133 Glover, John 148 Gluckswan, Louis L 125 Goble, Richard 125 Godersky, George E 327 Godersky, Lois ShofT 327, 337 Godsey, Ellis Basil.. 94, 108, 295 Goebel, Carl 140 Goebel, Russell 140, 296, 352, 355 Goldberg, Milton S.. 167 Goldberg, Morton 171 Goldman, Marcus 167 Goldsmith, Joan 188 Goldstein, Robert R 171, 296 Good, Bob 117 Good, Sam 175 Good, Wesley C 357 Good, William H.... 108, 155 Goodman, Lennard 167 Goodman, Phil 171 Gordon, Frederick 24, 156, 255, 296 Gordon, Ruth J 44, 112, 195, 296 Goshorn, Emma Lou 137 Goshorn, Phyllis 118, 296 Goshorn, Wayne 99, 125 Gould, Carroll C 114, 296 Gourley, Donald D 143 Govorko, Michael 125 Goyert, Chalmers L...24, 30, 94, 100, 296 Grabow, Mary Elizabeth 130, 131 Gradle, Robert 155 Graessle, George 159 Graessle, Toms 159 Graf, John P 175 Graham, Hesfer Louise 74, 89, 133, 296 Graham, John 126 Graham, Ralph 228 Graves, Jack 42, 155 Graves, Orris Avon. 296 Graves, Parker 143 389 Gray, Caridoyne 1 83 Gray, Donald C 125 Grayson, Mary E 130, 131 Grecian, Paul 151 Green, Charles 327, 340 Green, Frederick 296 Green, Jane 137 Green, Myron Harrison 327, 336 Green, Norman 147 Green, Patricia Anne 296 Green, Thomas 144 Greenberg, Whitney J 171, 296 Greenburgh, Arthur 57, 296 Greene, William E.... 125 Greeno, Jack 159 Greenough, Charles Kim 164 Gregory, Charles F 296, 340 Gregory, Preston 100, 144 Gresham, Betty Jo 296 Grey, Don 54 Grieger, Cleo 296 Griesel, Betty Jane 130, 131, 296 Griffin, Carol Mowbray 296 Griffin, Marian 191 Griffith, Jeanne 112, 199 Griggs, Virginia 187 Grigsby, John E 296 Grimsley, Betty Lou 49 Grodriam, Wayne E 338 Groh, Marvin 255 Groher, David Louis 352, 354 Gromer, Roscoe L 348, 349, 355 Grosskopf, Charlotte 196 Grossman, Earl 26 Grossnickle, Harry 339 Grusin, Judith 137 Guard, Rebecca Jane 199 Guffin, Catherine 195 Gumbineu, Robert 125 Gutstein, Lenora A 49 Gwin, Robert 175, 244 Gwinn, George 351, 355 H Haas, Joe 179 Hadley, Lucy Jane 204 Haeberle, Bill 46, 100, 125 Haines, Earl Paul 296 Haines, Richard F 147 Hale, Charles 296 Halfast, Richard W 327, 340 Hall, A. Morris 117 Hall, Betty Ellen 187 Hall, Bill 151 Hall, Irving 84 Hall, Robert 109, 296 Hall, Sheldon 348, 349, 352, 357 Hallet, Byrne 108, 151 Halsall, Harry 55, 151 Ham, Marjorie Louise 130 Homer, Charles 167 Hamilton, Betty . 358 Hamilton, Frank .55, 97, 172 Hamilton, Ralph 168, 244, 255 Hamlin, Jack 168 Hammel, Hanley 94, 296 Hammer, William J 175 Hamp, Fred 356 Hamvas, Betty 207 Hancher, Catherine J 112, 180 Hanley, Francis 144 Hannie, Ralph 152 Hansell, Ralph 172 Hansen, Charlotte Mae 130 Hansen, Jack G 155 Hanson, Bill 129 Hanson, Robert 29, 129 Harbough, Tom 140 Hardeman, Deotis 359 Hardin, Martha A 204 Hare, Robert W 176 Harger, Robert 97, 100, 115, 164 Harkless, Betty 187 Harmon, John S 143 Harmeier, Robert L 117 Harms, Shirley G 133 Harrell, Paul 255 Harrell, Russell 129, 234 Harrer, Kenneth R 297 Harriott, Anne 192, 297 Harris, Irene S 133 Harris, Judith A 344 Harris, Mary Kathryn 112, 199 Harris, Patricia - 192 Harris, Robert 115, 152 Harrison, Betty 188 Harrison, Byron 341 Harrison, James 172 Harrison, Maribeth 195 Harrison, Walter 126 Harrison, William R 155 Harrod, Dorothy 297 Harsh, Daniel 125 Harting, Harold K 100, 107 Hartley, Frederick J 107, 125 Hartman, Martha 191, 297 Hartman, Norman K 125 Hartzer, Margaret J 130 Harvey, Kenny 125 Harvey, Robert 168 Hasapes, Ted 234 Hasbrook, Margery 54, 191, 220, 363 Hasbrook, Thomas C 24, 155, 297 Haskett, Nancy 195 Hosier, Norman 297, 336 Hosier, Richard 125 Hasse, Stanley F 125 Hastings, John S 273 Hastings, Virginia 192 Hasty, Donald 24, 147 Hatala, Margaret 71, 112, 134 Hatfield, John R 148 Hattersley, Mary 200, 297 Haugh, Bob 151 Haupt, Elizabeth M 49, 297 Hauser, John C 297 Havens, Oscar D 327, 340 Hawbaker, Maurice 176 Hawk, Edgar A 327, 336 Hawkins, Mary A 133 Hawley, Virginia 54, 101, 188 Hay, David C 129 Hayden, Betty 187 Hayes, C. Blaine 297 Hayes, Bob 151 Hayes, E. C 228, 254, 256 Hayes, Jeanne Keith 200, 297 Haymond, John F 125 Haynie, Gilmore S 117, 160, 297 Hazel, Mary Ellen 76, 112, 200 Healy, Dr 349, 351 Heath, Alice 134 Heath, Patricia E... Hebner, Harry J Heckenhower, Anne Hedges, F. C, Jr... Hedges, Ralph Heighway, G. F Heinz, Gerard He Karl Hajna, Walter J Held, Jean Held, Rebecca Held, Richard W 156, Helm, Janet Helms, Bob Helms, John Helvie, Mariangeneen 192, Henderson, Arvin Henderson, Dorothy J Henderson, Jack Henderson, Robert H 110, Hendricks, Anne 76, 101, Hendricks, Jules 26, 80, 86, Hendricks, Mary Elizabeth 81, 112, 195, Hendricks, Rosemary.. 71 , 76, 81, 112, Hendrickson, Harry Hendrickson, William Hennel, Cora B Henley, James 144, Henning, William 347, 348, Hennon, Myra Jean He Alv Henry, Howard 239, Henson, Eben 26, Hepner, Mrs. Herman S Herbert, Ed 91, 156, 233, Heritier, C. Jules 328, Herkless, Nancy Lee Hermann, Jane Herrin, Tom Herrold, Don Hertenstein, Paul 82, Heuser, Joan V Hewitt, Claude M Hiatt, Lloyd Richard P m, Elliott 164, d, Kathryn Eloise Arthur E Chester A , Ordine ligginbotham, Nell Jane rbrant, Helen M 130, ilgeman, Carl ;rt, C. Kay Doris Eileen ill, John D 109, ill, Kenneth Nat 164, 249, nbrand, Bill ... 220, 229, 232, rman, Alice illis, Margaret 79, 101, s, Jane Elizabeth s, Mary Ellen 195, 240, s, Robert inkel, Donna on, Jean aw, Betty Lou sch, Lee schberg, Robert 180 297 137 179 126 61 163 155 156 297 133 297 184 125 29 297 339 133 151 148 195 168 297 195 175 143 104 297 355 297 179 256 125 297 297 336 195 188 129 339 176 204 297 179 26 297 130 298 179 140 199 204 84 155 298 118 298 340 298 255 118 195 195 298 168 187 195 192 164 167 390 Hitch, Oliver M 328, 339 Hoadley, Bill 159 Hockema, Max W 168 Hodges, Harriett 192 Hodson, Richard M 82, 168 Hodupski, Ted 129 Hoelscher, Dave 129 Hoffman, Betty 133 Hoffman, Everett 160, 244, 255, 298 Hoffman, Julian 167 Hoffman, Marion 183 Hoffman, Robert 172, 298 Hogge, Betsy Ross. 130, 131 Hohe, J. William 152 Holdcraft, John 54, 107, 156 Holderness, Joe 172 Holland, Helen 192 Holland, Jean 200 Holland, Teen 187 Hollett, Kenny 151 Holmberg, Joan 134 Holmes, Claude 115, 175, 298, 339 Holmquist, Donald 107 Holmquist, Hazel Lois 298 Holsinger, Lorraine 30, 55 Holtel, Bill 151 Holthouse, Dan C 57, 63, 172 Homan, Betty Lee. 137, 188 Hooge, Anne 92, 207 Hooker, Ted 152 Hoover, J. Guy 339 Hoppes, Dean 1 75 Horn, Robert E 147 Horowitz, Mildred 203, 298 Horst, William 339 Horton, Jack H 298, 341 Hosbein, Al 176 Hoss, Robert 126, 122 Hostetter, D. Samuel 147, 298 Houck, Clara Eleanor 298 Houck, Jonathan 129 Houghton, Eleanor 43 Houghton, John W 117 Houk, Dick 44, 163 Houk, Preston S 298 House, Betty Von 130, 298 House, Floyd 91, 140, 298 Houser, Harold B 297, 339 Houston, Fred D 298 Houston, Rosemary 130 Howard, Ben 140 Howard, James 140 Howard, Marilyn 133 Howard, Mariruth 133 Howard, Martha Ellen ... 298 Howard, Paul E 298 Howden, Bob 179 Howe, Louis 168 Howe, Miss 104 Howe, Sergt. Willie 31 Hruskovick, Beatrice 207, 112 Hubbard, Bill E 24, 298 Huber, Frank Edward 298 Hubley, Ralph 129 Hudson, Jane 74, 76, 89, 92, 298 Huff, Fred 232 Huff, Harry E 82, 148, 298 Huffine, Phil 175 Huffer, Gloria Jeanne 130 Huffman, Carrie J 133 Hughes, Joe 159 Huletf, Margery Hull, Kenneth Hull, Sally 40, Humphrey, James C 328, Humphrey, Paul Humphreys, Dorothy June Humphreys, Helen Hungate, Bill Hunter, Dick W Hunter, Dorothea Hunter, Dorothy Jean Hunter, Robert Huntington, Constance Pauline Hussey, Tom 99, Hutchings, Betsy 59, 65, 191, Hutchison, Thomas Hutton, Joseph L .148, Hyatt, Margery 137, Hyde, Mary Ann Hylton, Delmer P 107, 110, 129, Hyman, Adeline Hyndman, David E 191 155 192 339 336 192 191 164 160 191 60 148 130 100 298 359 298 359 298 .125, 163, lacino, Carmen lacino, Peter Ingalls, Lois Ruth Ingram, Audree Ingwell, Guy B 328, Inman, Donald Int-Hout, Wynanda lota Sigma Pi. kick, Harold Leon 110, Irick, Norma II 163 234 195 188 339 360 200 103 298 Irle, Marcile A 92, 196, Irwin, Glenn W 143, 298, I. S. A Isenhour, Roger Ish, Roger Izsak, Sidney 167, Jackowski, Henry F 176, Jackson, Barbara 130, Jackson, Bob 26, Jackson, Phil Jacobs, Louis H 110, 129, Jacobs, Marcelda 54, Jacobson, Monroe Jacoby, Charles 159, 234, Jaffe, Sidney James, Ernest K James, George W James, Joe Janeway, Van Zandt, Jr 26, Jankowitz, Albin Jansen, Dorothy 200, Jarabak, Ann Marie sit, Charle W. Jarvis, Stephen Jay, Robert P 129, Jenkins, Dan 24, Jenkins, Joseph K 109, Jennings, Lamont 129, 298, Jenssen, Jean C Jessup, Ann Jester, William F Joers, Arnold 26, Joers, Ronald Johns, Richard Johnson, Barbara .49, 74, 92, 200, 298 336 84 339 293 360 298 298 160 140 298 187 167 256 167 148 357 129 126 339 293 298 140 148 298 155 155 336 133 344 143 129 129 168 219 Johnson, C. Roy 301, 341 Johnson, Carolyn 187, 298 Johnson, Edna M 196, 301 Johnson, Frances Carolyn 49, 301 Johnson, George 256 Johnson, Joseph Thomas 301 Johnson, Karl 80, 156 Johnson, Laura Ellen.. 344 Johnson, Lewis C 301 Johnson, Mary Jean 188 Johnson, Phyllis 188 Johnson, Robert E... 108, 109, 122, 125, 301 Johnson, Robert 91 Johnson, Robert S 148, 301 Johnson, Rose Judith 301 Johnson, Thelma 104 Johnson, Walter 129 Johnston, Sam W. D 108, 110, 301 Jones, Albert 147 Jones, Bob 256 Jones, Carol 134, 301 Jones, David Mifflin 175, 301 Jones, Ernest 256 Jones, Eileen 301 Jones, Eleanor L 131, 301 Jones, Ernest Clifton .80, 86, 107, 283, 301 Jones, Roy 140 Jones, Winfield 144 Jones, Duane 328, 340 Jordan, James H 29, 107, 129 Jordan, Robert Samuel 328, 339 Joseph, Jacquelyn 203 Joseph, Rex 301 Joyce, Duane 152 Judge, Tom 151 Julian, Chadwick 126 Jurgensen, Walter T 338, 301 Jurkiewicz, Walt 232, 301 K Kabison, Ambrig 84 Kahn, Alexander J 328 Kalafat, Fay 133 Kalb, Everett L 328, 340 Kamm, Maxwell W 109, 143 Kampschaefer, Margaret L 133 Kane, Campbell .91, 159, 225, 256, 301 Kane, Samuel 354 Kappa Alpha Theta 192 Kappa Delta Rho 152 Kappa Kappa Gamma 195 Kappa Sigma 155 Karger, Bettye 204 Karr, Carol 301 Karsell, William A 328, 336 Kassan, Martin . 359 Kassan, Roberta 359 Kasting, Gerald 126 Kattany, Edward 341 Keane, Rody 187 Keck, Louis Douglas, Jr 164 Keck, Robert A., Jr 160 Keckich, Peter 152 Keene, Carol 1 195 Keesey, Samuel 155 Keesling, Carol 301 Kehr, Elizabeth Ann 200, 301 Keith, Mary Lee 192 Kellar, Margaret E 103 Keller, Miss 104 Kelley, Clement Earl, Jr 301, 340 391 Kellie, Mary 55, 188 Kellum, Milton T 301 Kelsey, Charles 126 Kern, Barbara Ann 301 Kempf, George L 164 Kendall, Maurice 26, 115 Kendall, Paul 175, 225, 239, 256 Kennedy, William L.... 164 Kennelly, George 159, 249 Kennerly, Stella 207, 301 Kent, James 301 Kent, Rosemary 84 Kerins, James 125 Kern, Bernard 104, 301 Kern, Ernest L 129, 301 Kern, Gene 94, 107, 122, 129, 301 Kern, Keith 168 Kerrigan, William 159 Ketring, Jane 199 Keyes, Shirley 180 Keyser, Joseph 172 Kiely, John T 125 Kiesling, James 155 Kiesling, Louis A 155 Kiewitt, Faye Aileen 344 Kiewit, Jack E 125 Kilby, Roy 143, 244, 255 Kime, Charles 336 Kimley, Hank 250 Kimmich, Robert 339 King, Donald P 176 King, Dorothy 200 King, John E 176, 301 King, Joyce Porch 130 Kingsolver, Anne 137, 180 Kirby, Mrs. Lottie 276 Kircboff, Wayne F 356 Kirk, Robert 26, 159 Kirkwood, Maurice 68, 81, 86, 100, 108, 120, 175, 301 Kishel, Joe 122, 126 Kistner, Jack M 94, 108, 109, 301 Kivett, Maurice 156 Kiwak, Violet 130 Kixmiller, Roy 356 Kleinman, Marvin 167 Kline, Jack 167 Klingelhoffer, Calvin 140 Klopfensfein, Stanley A 160 Klotz, Joe 172 Knelleken, Gertrude 79 Knight, Howard 43, 81, 147 Knight, James 107, 301 Knoll, Mary Louise 301 Knoop, Dorothy 199 Knowles, Francis E 117 Knox, Frances 183 Knoy, Mildred Pope.-- 301 Kochery, David 168 Kohr, Mae Louise 60 Kokos, John 152 Kollman, C. Elizabeth 112, 207, 301 Koning, Doris 92, 112, 204, 301 Konold, Jane 191 Koontz, Monroe 80, 84, 94, 108, 218 Koontz, Ralph 163 Koontz, William A 301, 341 Kopp, Herschel 339 Korn, Jerome M 328 Kosanke, Betty Jane 118 Kosanke, Harold E 338 Koskinen, Doris Jane 130 Kosnoff, Albert 82, 167, 301 Kotora, Frank 302 Kot tlowski, Hellen 301, 358 Krajac, Martin 328, 339 Kramer, Rita Carolyn 137 Kranik, Margaret 207 Kratz, Grace 192 Kreitzer, William H 168 Kreutzer, Joe 216 Kreuzberger, Helen Louise 302 Kreyling, Kurt 144, 302 Krieghbaum, Patricia 137, 191 Krise, Thomas H.... 160, 302 Kroeger, Katie 195 Kroner, Ed 179 Krsek, George 84 Krueger, Don 125 Krueger, Geraldine Mae 204, 302 Krueger, John 68, 73 86, 91, 122, 125, 238, 254, 283, 302 Krumwiede, Walter G 151, 302 Kruyer, Cletus H 168 Kuehne, C. Karl 328, 336 Kuehn, Ruth Ann 195 Kuhn, Fredrick L 328, 338 Kuhn, Marjorie 101 Kunkler, Arnold 122, 125 Kunkel, William A 273 Kuntz, Edward James 114, 115, 129 Kunz, Norma 74, 76, 84 Kunz, Willis 302 Kurilovitch, Anna 103 Kurtz, Phyllis J 130 Kurtz, Tom 179 Kurtz, William A 328, 339 Kuykendall, James 126 L La Berteaux, A. 129 LaCluyse, Mary L 133 LaCroix, Robert 152 Lacey, Delores 204 LeFavour, Robert 172 La Follette, Forrest 328, 341 La Follette, Robert 339 Lagenaur, Norma 112, 204 Lakosky, Carl 114, 302 Lamb, George 122, 125 Lambda Chi Alpha 156 Lambert, Burton W 143 Lambert, C. W 336 Lambertus, Mary . 188 Lambo, Vincent 129 Land, Jim 172 Landaw, Rosemary 187 Landis, Ed 172 Landwerlen, Richard 129 Langell, Kathrine 30, 195 Langohr, Robert W 357 Lanphier, Irma 302 Larkin, Patrick B 24, 302 Larson, Dr. O. P 46 Larson, Mary June 204 Lathrop, Dorothy 344 Latshaw, Anna L 133 Latshaw, Charles W 328, 341 Laudeman, Sam 160 Laudeman, Martha 180, 302 Laupus, James 159 Lavengood, Elizabeth Ann 188 Lawler, Mary 192 lawson, Mary Jane 184 Layman, Frank A 109 Laymon, Richard 175 Leach, Josephine 192 Leakey, Mareia Millicent 130 Lease, Hilda 76 Lebioda, Henry 302, 338 Lee, Frances Gay 302 Lee, Irma 358 lee, Mary Lois 204 Lee.Sidney 125 Lefforge, Ruth 183, 302 Legeman, Charles 144, 302 Legg, Sylvia 187 Legg, Wilbur 156 Legum, Howard 126 Lehman, Maury 175 Leininger, John 107, 109, 175, 302 Leist, George-Anna 196 Leman, William 155 Leming, Ben L 328, 339 Lenard, Harry 147 Leonard, C. Stephen 164, 302 Leonard, William 179 Lerner, Walt 55, 82, 108, 151 Lesser, Albert E 24, 302 Letsinger, Betty 192 Letsinger, Dick 168 Lett, Franklin 125 Levey, Phyllis 203 Levi, Malcolm 126 Levi, Thomas 126 Levin, Bob 125 Levy, Allen 167 Levy, Evelyn 130, 203 Levy, Sam S 171 Lewandowski, Walter F 147 Lewis, Beatryce . 302 Lewis, Frank 151 Lewis, Martha 50, 133, 302 Lewis, Mary Jane 302 Lewis, Richard 26, 31, 155, 302 Lewis, Ted 24, 159, 256, 302 Lewis, Warren 172, 244 Liaptscheff, Kiril K 125 Liber, Irene 184 Licking, Donald L 107, 110 Lienhart, Gloria 200 Light, Alice 191 Lindquist, J. Wayne 143 Lindquist, Svea 118, 303 Linker, Robert 171 Lipner, Herbert D 171 Lipps, Joseph Dale 303 Littell, Harry B 24, 26, 94, 303 Littell, Helen 184 Little, Leon H., Jr 68, 94, 122, 303 Little, Marjorie 195 Little, Ralph 99, 100, 129 Little, Ronald 29, 129 Llabres, Carlos . 303 Lloyd, John 125, 303 Lloyd, Robert Paul 303 Locke, Elsie Ann 192 lockridge, Betty 79, 101, 104, 130 Lockwood, Cecil, Jr 155, 303 Long, Donald 156 Long, George 156 Long, Miss 349 Long, Richard 129 392 logon, Fred 143 Logan, John 168, 244 Longnecker, Lynn 152 Loos, Joe 168 Lorch, Alex 129 Losche, Al 46, 159 Louden, Alice Ann 192 Love, Helen 303 Lovell, Harvey D 303, 338 Lowe, Bill 147 Lowe, Maxine 200 Lowell, Jeanne Marianna 130 Lowenstein, Alan 125 Lowery, Charles 347, 348, 357 Lowey, Dorothy 191 Loy, Max C 26 Lucas, Robert 73, 91, 148 Luccock, Dorothy 196 Ludwick, Virginia 180, 303 Ludwig, Bud 175 Ludwig, Eugene 125 Lung, Dede 92, 195, 303 Lusher, Wilfred .55, 57, 63, 86, 100, 147 Lusk, Betty Jane 191 Lutes, Betty J 133 Lybrook, Anne 184 Lybrook, John 172 Lycos, John 24, 26 Lynn, Orlena M 130 Lyon, Barbara 180 Lyon, John B 156 Lyon, William 82, 109, 172, 303 Lyons Center 126 Lytle, J. William 355 M McAdams, Anson 144 McAdams, Bob 144 McAdams, Hugh Best... .144, 256, 303, 336 McAllister, Grace 358 McArt, Bruce A 168 McArt, Donald 168 McBane, John K 328 McBride, Eugene 109 McBride, Louis E 303 McCaffery, Patricia 180 McCain, Marjorie H... 131, 200 McCartney, Donald H 328, 340 McCaughan, Veva Gene 130 McCay, John 125 McCain, Bill 159 McClain, Gerald 359 McClelland, Don 144 McClelland, Howard 160 McClellan, John 339 McClintock, Norma 104, 184, 303 McClosky, Eugene 125 McClung, Guy 26 McClure, Billie Lou 84, 303 McClure, Clark 156 McClure, Robert L 100, 164, 303 McColgin, Maxine 196 McColgin, Wanda 196 McColl, Rhea 199 McConnell, Jim 151 McConnell, Thomas P 26 McCooe, Dave 250 McCormick, Martha Jane 134 McCormick, Robert S 175, 303 McCracken, Bob 140 McCracken, Branch 244 McCracken, Donald 172 McCray, Jack 155, 303 McCreery, Mary Ann 188 McCullough, Bill 148 McDaniels, Jim 148 McDonald, Bette 187, 303 McDonald, Frank C 328 McDonald, George D 24, 26, 303 McDonald, Jim 125 McDonald, Peggy 191 McDonald, Ralph E 143 McDonald, Richard Leroy 108, 109, 303 McDowell, Fletcher 341 McElhinney, Mary Ina 303 McElwee, R. John... 155 McFaddin, Lawrence 164 McFall, Charles J 355 McFarland, Robert 175, 304 McGee, Joanne 196 McGinniss, Esther 133 McGreevey, John 44, 163 McGuire, James Patrick 175 McGuire, Rita Jane 130, 131 McHugh, Sheila 187 Mcllveen, Mary Elizabeth 184, 304 Mcintosh, Bob 159 Mclntyre, James H 26, 172 Mclntyre, Marjorie 200 McKay, Betty G 133 McKee, Billy 109, 110, 304 McKee, Jean 200 McKesson, Knight 57 McKinley, Joseph 304, 339 McLaughlin, Fred L 80, 115, 151 McMahon, Charles 126 McMillan, Bette 134 McMillin, Bo 228 McMillin, Bo-Peep 195 McMurtrie, Uz 273 McMurtry, Donald 140 McNamara, James 125 McNay, Glen 31 McNierney, Carol 191 McOmber, Homer A 110, 304 McPike, Barbara 180 McQueen, Betty DeVone 130, 304 McWhinney, Jane 304 Mace, Jim 164 MacCaa, Mary Alice 187 MacDonald, Margery Jean 304 MacGill, Robert Ayres 97, 100, 160 Mackey, Louis Edwin 304 Mocklin, David A 155, 304 Mackres, Charles 304 Maddox, John 140 Maddox, Mildred 110, 112 Mader, John Henry 328, 340 Maegerlein, Dorothy Jane..... 101 Magennis, James 140 Magner, Max 126 Mail, Barbara 180 Main, Donald G 168 Malcomson, Maryalice 192 Malek, Al. .58, 63, 304 Malicote, Paul V 304 MalifF, Frank E 143 Moloney, Mary Margaret... 195 Manalan, Maurice M 304 Mangin, Hook 160 Manis, William A 129 Mankin, Bill 179 Mann, Don 140 Mann, J., Jr 117 Mann, J. David 129 Mann, Mary 74, 89, 92, 304 Mannan, John Allen 108, 304 Marin, Laddie 129 Mark, Jeffrey 304 Markert, Betty 112, 187 Marks, Arnold 171 Marks, Mildred Mary 304 Marks, Ruth 110, 112, 203 Marks, Salvo 328 Maroney, Mary Frances 304 Marques, Elza 130 Marr, Griffith 328, 336 Marr, Guff 331 Marr, Ray 164 Marshall, Glenn L 164, 304 Marshall, Millie 188 Marshall, Roy 175 Martin, Carol Jean... 188 Martin, Charles F 328, 338 Martin, Harold 339 Martin, James 160 Martin, Jean E 133 Martin, Joe V 168, 339 Martin, Paul 46 Martin, Philip Glenn... 109, 304 Martinsen, Walter A 125 Martinson, Marjory 183 Mason, Dick 172 Mason, Don 26, 179 Mason, Earl J 160 Mason, John 159 Mason, Richard L 338 Master, Brooker L 328, 339 Masters, Russell 126 Matlock, James 356 Matthew, Bob 84, 125 Matthews, Jean 137 Matthews, John 126 Matthews, Jim 172 Matthews, William 126 Mauzy, Merritt 304 Maxedon, Bob W 129 Maxwell, Leslie 144 Maxwell, Robert 168 May, Arthur 151 May, Ben F 171 Maycox, John 148, 304 Meadows, Betty 196 Meal, Edith Lavone 304 Mecklenburg, John A 304 Meek, Barbara 41, 191, 210, 212 Mehilovich, Bob 125 Mehlig, Roy 160 Meihaus, George 159, 304 Meihaus, Jack 97, 159 Meihsner, Gene 155, 225 Meily, Sara 187 Meissner, Dorothy 184 Meister, John Parker 24, 26, 115, 168, 305 Mekler, Dorothy 358 Mellen, Bob 160, 305 Mellen, Marjorie Louise 188, 305 Meloy, Bill 151 Melvin, Edwin 168 Mendenhall, Philip E 109, 164 Mendez, Fernando L 148, 305 Menke, Bill 225 393 Mensch, James 159 Menze, Leona 57, 71, 79, 133, 218 Merchen, Edward A 305 Merley, Richard 109, 147 Messier, Harvey E 176 Meyer, Olga 133 Meyer, Ralph W 143, 305 Meyer, Theodore 143 Michel, Norman 99, 126 Michelena, Conti 118 Micheli, William D 356 Michener, Richard Shenk 348, 349, 355 Micu, Mary 305 Middleton, David 126 Middlelon, Thomas 328, 331, 339 Midkiff, Bob 125 Miers, Bob 26 Mikola, Allan 110, 305 Miles, William D 159 Milford, Bill 163 Milks, Mary E 133 Millen, Doris 134 Miller, Alwyn Elizabeth 188, 305 Miller, Betty 188, 305 Miller, Darl 164 Miller, Florence Lee 203, 305 Miller, Jack B 338 Miller, J. Martin 100, 115, 164 Miller, Joseph A 99 Miller, J ulia 200 Miller, Logan 59, 179 Miller, Margaret C 359 Miller, Marjorie 101, 188 Miller, Mary Florence 207 Miller, Mickey 24, 151, 305 Miller, Nathan J 167, 305 Miller, Norma 203 Miller, Pat 81, 101 Miller, Richard 129 Miller, Richard S 175 Miller, Terry 168 Miller, Vergil F 147, 305 Millis, Arthur 126 Millis, Mary Louise 112, 133, 305 Mills, Bud 117 Mills, Lexie 114, 256, 305 Milteer, Jayne 192, 306 Minczewski, Richard C 306, 341 Miner, Rosemary 180, 306 Minnick, Wayne 46, 94, 306 Minniear, Olive 306 Mirich, Bernard A 125 Misch, Bill 125 Mishler, Karl 126 Mitchell, C. Bradford 60 Mitchell, Betty Jane 40, 200 Mitchell, Dorothea Virginia. ...1 30, 184, 240 Mitchell, Earl 136, 256, 338 Mitchell, Jessie Irene 344 Mitchell, Mary Helen 306 Mitchell, Robert H 336 Mitchell, Weir 129 Mitchell, W illiam Denton 306 Mock, Dana 126 Modenger, Martha 359 Moeller, Kenneth 24, 73, 86, 91, 120, 179, 225, 233, 306 Mohr, George W 26, 31, 143 Moldthan, Dorothy 204 Monk, Louis 172 Montgomery, Dorothy 358 Moon, John P 148 Moore, Bill 168 Moore, Bob 26, 99 Moore, Donald 99, 125 Moore, Dorothy Catherine 184 Moore, Helen 183 Moore, J. Grant 175 Moore, Jeanne 101 Moore, William C 117, 306 Moorhead, Robert G 26, 82, 159 Mopps, Harold 306 Moran, Betty Jane 76, 306 Moron, Richard R 175, 306 Morey, Barbara .„ 200 Morgan, Evelyn Mae 204, 306 Morgan, Jim 84 Moritz, Madonna 207, 306 Morris, Fred 82, 100, 175 Morris, Glenn 107 Morris, Jack 97, 148 Morris, Rebecca Anne 112, 195, 306 Morris, Richard 144, 244, 306 Morris, William 82, 102, 151, 306 Morrison, Betty 191 Morrison, Fielding 155 Morrison, James 155 Morrison, Jean 191 Morrison, Margaret Anne 191, 306 Morrow, Mary Martha 344 Morrow, Robert 1 68 Mortar Board 89 Morton, George 129 Moses, Robert 125 Moseson, Louis 171 Moskowitz, Al 167 Moss, Mary Alberta 329, 337 Mowry, Betty Jane 44, 49, 200 Moynahan, John 144 Mozingo, A. Kemp. 338 Mueller, Kate H 276 Muentzer, Edward 329, 340 Muff, Beverlee 188 Muir, Alexander F...63, 68, 120, 148, 306 Muller, Lullus P 329, 341 Mumaw, Charles 99, 100, 129 Mummert, Donna 118, 306 Mundy, Audrey 183 Mungovan, Patricia 180 Munro, Edna 266 Munson, Donald E 168 Murchie, William D 159 Murphy, Bill 129 Murphy, George 97, 151 Murphy, James 46, 126 Murphy, Wanda Louise 345 Murray, John 26, 147 Muscente, Margaret 358 Myer, Phyllis C 133 Myers, Edwina K 71, 74, 306 Myers, Esther Mae 306 Myers, Jean Clare 112, 137, 306 Myers, Marian 112, 200, 306 Myers, Peggy 180 Myers, Susan A 195 Mysliwiec, Joseph 26 N Narcowich, Paul 168, 225 Nash, Jack 235 Nashold, Blaine S 176 Neal, Frances 192 Needham, Ruth 187 Neely, Robert 306 Neff, Elizabeth 187, 307 Neff, Richard B 160, 307 Neighborgall, Roger 151 Nelson, Bob 82, 160, 255 Nelson, John R 109 Nering, Evar D 104, 179 Nesbit, James A 26, 307 Nesbitt, Byron D 168 Nesson, Beatrice 133, 307 Neuman, Richard E 143 Nevel, Melvin 171 New, Sam 171 Newby, Eileen 188 Newby, Gene 122 Newby, Marianna 130 Newcomb, Robert 307 Newhard, Bill 172 Newhouse, Pat 187 Newman, Roy Woodford 307 Nichol, George 160 Nicholas, Dennis 152, 306, 341 Nicholas, Jame s 307 Nichols, Patt 112, 191, 307 Nicoara, Cornelia 196 Nicolai, Norman A 26, 176 Niederhofer, Merle 356 Nielson, Frank 156 Mill, John H 329, 341 Niven, William E 168 Noffsinger, Jerald 339 Nolan, Alan 160 Noland, James E 164, 307 Norton, Horace 329, 341 Norwich, Mary Alice 307 Nowlan, Lewis E 97, 163 Nuffer, Bob 144 Nunn, Margaret 112, 184 Nusbaum, Allan 179 Nusbaum, Bette 184 Nu Sigma Phi 337 o O ' Banion, Kathleen 59, 191 O ' Brien, Charles 152 O ' Brien, John 152 O ' Brien, Pat 50 O ' Bryan, Dick 144 O ' Bryant, Jean 188 O ' Conner, Kathleen 187 O ' Dell, Harry W 307, 336 O ' Dowd, Madylon 79, 307 O ' Dowd, Marie Phyllis 307 Olofson, Andrew G 61 Olson, Ann 180 Olson, Eugene 144 O ' Neal, Alma R 133 O ' Neal, Ann F 307 O ' Neal, Lieut. B. F 31 O ' Neil, Jerry 99, 1 29 Ordung, Jean E. 133, 307 Orr, Robert 107 Orrison, Mary Patricia 207 Osborne, Mary Louise 112, 308 Osburn, Quentin W 308 Oskard, Mary Ann 130 Ossehberg, Charles 172 Ostrowski, Jim 151 Oswald, Charles E 144 394 Overbuy, Arthur S., Jr 164 Overbay, Norma 192, 308 Overesch, Harry B 129 Overpeck, Geneva 134 Overshiner, John 108, 159 P Pace, Dorothy Jeanne 130, 199 Pace, Maxine 133 Paddock, Basil 84, 125 Paddock, Bob 143 Painter, John 53, 108, 172, 308 Pakucko, Michael 152, 225, 250, 308 Palmer, Daphne 195, 308 Pan-Hellenic Council 83 Parker, Charles M.... 129 Parker, George 339 Parker, Juanita F 184 Parker, Richard B 107 Parkinson, Bob 125 Parks, Charles 125 Parr, Ernestine 183 Parrish, Henrietta 200 Parrish, Myles 117 Parry, Vivian 40, 184, 358 Parsons, Ruth 184 Partenheimer, John 97, 172, 244 Pass, Jeanette F 49, 308 Paterna, Charles 125 Patton, Stanley 26, 147 Patty, Betty Jane 308 Patty, Bob 249 Paul, Dick 176 Pauline, Margaret 187 Paulson, John 129 Pavis, Bob 168, 255, 308 Paynter, Claude 172 Peacock, Helen L 133, 308 Peacock, Robert 329, 339 Peak, Frederick 143 Pearce, Charles 46, 152 Pearlman, Dave 171 Pearman, John 81, 164 Pearson, Dorothy 188 Pearson, Winifred 200 Peck, Jack 160 Peckinpaugh, Carmel 180 Pedicini, Joseph L 102, 308 Peirce, William, Jr 148 Pelikan, Inge 83, 112, 204 Pence, J. Robert 29, 50, 147 Pendry, Reba 92, 184, 308 Pennington, Robert 126 Peper, Craig 129 Pesch, Mary Alice 137 Peters, Jerome H 109, 143, 255, 308 Peterson, Harriett G 133 Peterson, J. Dwight 273 Peterson, John P 168 Peterson, Patricia 191, 240 Peterson, Phyllis G 180 Pfenninger, Paul 144 Pfrommer, Fred 91, 152, 308 Phelps, Mable Louise 308 Phi Delta Phi 117 Phi Delta Theta 159 Phi Epsilon Kappa 114 Phi Gamma Delta 160 Phi Kappa 163 Phi Kappa Psi 164 Phi Mu 196 Phi Omega Pi 199 Phillipp, Emma Lucy 76, 89, 308 Phillippe, Joanna M 204, 309 Phillips, Betty Lou 207, 309 Phillips, John F 309, 341 Phillips, Raleigh Leewell, Jr. 164 Phillips, Robert G 148, 309 Phipps, Priscilla 180 Phipps, Rebecca 180 Pi Beta Phi 200 Pickord, Robert 355 Pierce, Bill .. 148, 309 Pierpont, Jo Anne 48, 89, 92, 309 Pierson, Jeanne 30, 54, 188 Pietsch, Shirley 200 Pihos, Pete 126 Pi Lambda Phi 167 Pilger, Agnes Julia 309 Pinter, Joe 24, 31, 94, 309 Piper, James 26, 144 Pirkle, Hubert 172 Pitkin, William 339 Pitman, William C 102, 309 Pittman, Marjorie 309 Plank, Charles Robert 338 Piatt, Bill 29, 147 Platter, Buster 175 Pleasant, Lois 309 Pleiades 92 Ploner, Shirley 191, 309 Poe, Mary Kathryn 309 Poland, Roberta 309 Polhemus, Warren C 329, 336 Pollom, Roy Daniel 164 Pool, Patricia Ann 130 Poorman, Alden 351, 355 Poorman, Ann Elizabeth 345 Pope, Charles F 357 Pope, Janice L 65, 195, 309 Poppler, Phil E 309 Poracky, Bernard 125 Porter, Calvin 129 Porter, Leah 187 Porter, Vernon I 309 Postlewaite, Sam 125 Pottenger, Doris 134, 309 Potter, Anne 207 Powell, J. Paxton 329, 339 Powers, James W 309, 352 Prather, Betty Jane 195 Preger, Daniel 176 Prendergast, Francis Vincent 309 Presser, James 126 Pressler, Paul Robert 29, 108, 110, 143 Pressley, Jackson B 160 Prestrud, Dorothy H 133 Price, Albert M., Jr 110, 309 Price, Ernest H 336 Price, Harry 160, 239, 256 Price, Helen E 133 Price, Manuel 129 Price, Maxine 200 Price, Paddy 187 Price, Robert 164 Price, William 129 Prickett, Ralph 104, 256 Prikosovits, Agnes 118 Prinz, Betty Jane 180 Priser, Bob 151 Pruett, John R 100, 104 Pruett, Paul H 348, 349, 355 Pruett, Robert 26, 140 Pruitt, Betty 83, 184, 309 Prusiecki, Raymond J 176 Prusiecki, Walter S 176 Pryor, Richard 325, 329, 340 Pryweller, Leonard 171 Pugh, Madelyn 65, 83, 89, 92, 195, 283, 309 Pulley, Jane 200, 309 Purcell, John K 117, 309 Purcell, Robert 160 Purky, Tom 55, 100, 160 Puthoff, Lewis 126 Q Qualkenbush, Katherine 101 Qualkenbush, Mary Frances 309 R Raber, Robert 144 Rabin, Joe 167 Radtke, Herbert 363 Ragon, Jean ...54, 57, 58, 65, 204 Ragsdale, Edward M 148 Rahdert, Karl G 68, 80, 84 86, 94, 108, 109, 120, 283, 310 Raibley, Walter 351 Ramsay, Jack 97, 108, 159, 259 Rang, Barbara Hoke 192, 310 Rankin, Bob 155 Rankin, Henry J 100 Rons, Gerald 122, 126 Raper, Helen Kay 192 Raphael, Robert Leonard 82, 97, 171 Rappaport, Gersten 167, 310 Rappaport, Harold 167 Rariden, Philip 147 Rasor, Robert 155 Ratcliff, Russell E 109, 310 Ratliffe, Don 175 Raudin, Emile 399 Rausch, Bob 156 Ravdin, Emile 329 Rowlings, Rosanne 192 Rearick, John 310 Reckner, Bettye Ann 195 Redding, Charles 172 Redman, Jean Ellen 188, 310 Redman, John 29, 140 Redman, Mary Josephine 130, 188 Reed, Betty 187 Reed, Doris Mae 345 Reed, Edward K 310 Reed, Ella Jo 192 Reed, George 144 Reed, Jack 360, 172 Reed, Robert 164 Reel, Rita 183, 310 Rees, Mary Frances 74, 76, 89, 92, 192, 283, 310 Reese, Jeanne 30, 130, 195 Reese, Keith C 143, 310 Reeves, Dave 175 Reeves, Marguerite 133, 310 Reeves, Walter 160 Regel, Betty Anne 122, 204 Regenfuss, James W 114, 310 Registered Nurses Club 118 Reich, Charles Stephen 310 Reimers, Arthur 99, 125 395 Reinhard, John James, Jr 160, 310 Renfro, Frances 200, 310 Retterer, Dick 148 Reynolds, Lorene 199 Reynolds, Richard 336 Reznik, Edward John 310 Rhetls, Harriette 195 Rheubottom, Jean 200 Rhoads, Ernest 129 Rhodes, Allan 175 Ricci, Carmel Michaeline 130 Rice, Carol Jeanne 130, 131, 200 Richards, Emilie 180 Richards, Frances Josephine 311 Richards, James B 26 Richards, Max W 129 Richardson, June 59, 79, 180 Richardson, Stewart 129 Richason, Ben 144 Richey, Paul J 107, 110 Richmond, William 311 Richter, Ben 171 Ricke, Oral 73, 86, 172 Ricketts, Robert Murray 143 Riddle, Phyllis 137 Ridgely, Bob 125, 143 Ridgway, William W 160 Rieder, John J 329, 336 Riepe, Addison E 129, 311 Rifner, Eugene Symons 311, 341 Riggle, Earl 126 Riggs, Peg 311 Riley Manor 126 Riley, Paul 24, 256, 311 Rinehart, Robert 126 Ripley, John W 311 Risley, Garnet Irene 130, 131 Ritchie, Bill 125 Ritchie, Dr 331 Ritter, Melvin 355 Ritz, Albert S 329, 340 Roach, Betty Jane 74 Robb, Andrew William 109, 110, 311 Robb, Robert G 108, 143, 311 Robbins, Mary Ellen 192 Robbins, Walter ....81, 86, 107, 168, 311 Roberts, Maxine 184 Roberts, Paul 168 Roberts, Ruth 311 Robertson, Carolyn 200, 311 Robey, Janice 183, 311 Robinson, Frank 311 Robinson, Fred 122 Robinson, Joan 191 Robinson, Lloyd T 311 Robinson, Maurice A 140 Robinson, Robert B 168 Robinson, Bill 46, 140, 311 Robison, Joyce Elaine 130 Rock, Herschel 29, 94, 122, 125 Rockhill, Alvin 144 Rockwood, Charles 164 Rodenberger, Arthur Eugene. ...24, 140, 311 Rodin, Walter 167 Roe, Nora 311 Roeder, Bud 125 Roesch, Ryland 163 Rogers, Cort 239 Rogers, Dr 347 Rogers, Jackson 126 Rogers, James 159 Rohde, Kenneth 311 Rohleder, Julia A 130, 131 Roll, Edmund C 329 Rolle, Orville G 311 Romine, Bob 179 Ronzone, Patsy 148 Roper, Jarvis 155 Rose, John 164 Rose, Max 144 Rose, Truman E 164, 311 Rosen, Martin 125 Rosenbloom, Jack 167 Rosenbush, Robert D 147 Ross, Evelyn G. ..: 337 Ross, Janet K 195 Ross, Lela Jane 76, 192, 311 Roth, Bernard 167 Roth, Harold W 176 Roth, J. Robert 329, 339 Rothenberger, Jane 358 Rousch, Treva 311 Routt, Don 125 Rowe, Betty Jean 71, 76, 187, 311 Rowe, Howard H 341 Rowe, Jack 164 Rowell, W. H 179 Rowen, Betty 134, 312 Rowland, Dick 159 Rowland, June 57, 65, 312 Roy, Robert 147 Royalty, DeWayne 26, 109, 312 Royer, Bill 244 Royer, Robert 250 Royer, R. Quentin 352, 357 Ruddell, John Milton 312 Rudolph, Mark 140 Rudy, William 164 Ruff, Carmen 137 Ruff, Carolyn 137 Rumbold, Mildred Pleasant 359 Rumph, Roger 80, 179 Runnion, James 163 Rupel, Martha 191 Rupert, John M 148 Rush, Virginia 207 Russell, Ben 312 Russell, Mary Dulin .188, 312 Russell, Mary Jane 345 Russo, Arnold 122, 125 Rust, Lee R 148 Rutz, Eleanore S 204 Rymarowicz, Lillian 60 s Saban, Lou 235, 256 Saban, Michael 125 Sabin, Mary 204 Sabin, Robert ..80, 84, 94, 115, 129, 312 Sablosky, Irving 171 Sablosky, Marvin E 171, 239, 254, 312 Sacks, Harry J 312 Sailors, Mary 112, 195, 312 Saint, William K 172 Salisbury, Jack 97, 115, 147 Salm, Andrew 329 Sambor, Andrew H., Jr 151 Samms, Virgil W 175, 312 Sampsel, Art 129 Sampson, Virginia 183 Sanders, Irene 84 Sands, Eleanor 112, 187 Sarengach, Nick 255 Savage, Lee 250 Saver, Gordon 60, 115, 167 Savesky, Betty 59, 65, 203, 312 Saxton, Robert F 129 Sayles, Ann 195 Scamahorn, Malcolm 338 Scea, Dorothy Anne 345 Schabinger, Jane 54, 101, 191 Schabinger, Jean 54, 101, 191 Schafer, Alice 112, 204 Schafer, William 341 Schaffer, Frederick M 352, 356 Schaller, Bob 156 Scharnberg, Jean 180 Schatzman, Leonard 167 Schechter, John S 329, 339 Schecter, William J 312 Scheidler, Hubert 144 Schenkel, Janet 40, 192 Scherk, Mr 104 Schimpff, William 122 Schinebein, Ed 140 Schlaegel, Theodore 324, 330, 336 Schlafer, George F 262 Schlee, Sonya 30, 40, 195 Schlegel, Don M 100 Schilling, Mary 183 Schmadel, Elnora 312 Schmalz, Mary Susan 191, 312 Schmall, Charles H 341 Schmidt, Robert L 341 Schmiede, George Zur 152 Schmoll, Robert J 312 Schneck, Paul 129 Schneider, Marge 180 Scholl, Booth 140, 312 Schoonover, Jeanne 204 Schroeter, Geraldine 134, 204 Schuchman, Abe 167 Schutz, Bettee 187 Schultz, Vergil 312 Schutland, Dorothy 134 Schwartz, Jerry 129 Schwartz, Jo 188 Schwartz, Stanley 167, 312 Schwarz, Robert 125 Schwehn, Paul 46, 48, 59, 63, 94, 108, 312 Schwimmer, Monroe 167 Scott, John S 143 Scott, Margaret 196 Scott, Perin 172 Scudder, Virginia 312 Scully, John T 168 Scully, Madeline 92, 200, 312 Seagle, W. Courtney 80, 143 Seaman, Bill 129 Seaman, Vida 188, 312 Sears, Josephine .... 200 Seaton, Bob 168 Segal, Stanley J 176 Seger, Ralph 114 Seimetz, John 151 Seitz, Ed 129 Seledsow, Helen Mary 130 Self, Victor 129 Seiner, Marian 358 Seltzer, Harold 126 Selzer, Floyd W 312 Selzer, John F 94, 100, 313 396 Sembower, Charles ...57, 59, 63, 144, 313 Senseny, Eugene 125 Seward, Marilyn 42, 195 Sexson, Deloris 204 Sexson, Pauline 137, 204 Sexson, Mary Ann 200 Shafer, Dorothy 188 Shaker, William John 115, 313 Shalansky, Alberta 203, 313 Shalses, Thomas M 125 Shapiro, Isadore 167, 313 Sharavsky, Edward 167 Shovel, Marc 60, 167 Shaw, Jim 125, 140 Shaw, John B 355 Shaw, Max H 114 Shaw, Robert 125 Showhan, Bob 140 Sheedy, William 313 Sheeler, Doris 313 Sheeler, Faye G 330, 337 Sheller, Tom 341 Shera, Ben H 108, 148, 231 Sherfey, Mary Jane 337 Sheridan, Mary M 133 Shertzer, Virginia 199 Sherwood, John R 29, 50 Shevchik, Alexander 340 Shields, Mary A 133 Shimel, Bob 29, 86, 108, 168 Shimp, Dorothy Jane 192 Sholtis, Judee 180 Sholly, William 53, 330, 338 Shook, Jane 195 Short, Robert 151 Shortle, John 159 Shoumaker, Russell 313 Shultz, JoAnn 130 Shultz, Richard T 313 Shumaker, Charles 156, 250, 255, 313 Shumaker, Marsh E 355 Sibbett, Joe 144 Sicanoff, Meriam 203 Sidebottom, Earl Winfield 313, 340 Siegel, Edgar 68, 171, 313 Sierra, Manuel .... 179 Siffin, William J 97, 100, 152 Sigler, Marjorie 313 Sigler, Patricia Jane 188, 313 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 168 Sigma Alpha Mu 171 Sigma Chi 172 Sigma Delta Tau 203 Sigma lota 99 Sigma Kappa 204 Sigma Nu 175 Sigma Pi 176 Silver, Dick 159 Silverman, Frances 50 Simmerman, Bill 164 Simmons, Joan 204 Simmons, Kathleen 101 Simon, Rivian J 313 Singer, Ralph 172, 313 Singleton, Palmer C 168 Sisson, Helen M 330, 337 Skaar, Palmer 125 Skillern, Penn G 313 Skony, Raymond M 125 Skull and Crescent 97 Slade, Martha 191 Slamkowski, Amelia E 313 Slattery, David J 156 Slick, George B 129 Slinkard, Robert 179 Sloan, Dorothy Alice 313 Slocum, Brad 151 Slominski, Anita 134 Slung, Evelyn 203, 313 Small, Betty Anne 188, 313 Small, Delores ..... 57, 184, 313 Smalley, Donald 99 Smart, Ellen Louise 130 Smart, Robert 26, 197 Smiley, Barbara Anne 195 Smith, Anne Elizabeth 184 Smith, Barbara 200 Smith, Betty Jane 46 Smith, Branson 140 Smith, Carleton 144 Smith, Charles E 108, 125, 159 Smith, Charles S 81, 109, 156, 313 Smith, David Joe 330, 339 Smith, Edith 345 Smith, George 313 Smith, Glen E 80, 91, 110, 176, 314 Smith, Glen G 24, 140 Smith, Helen 79 Smith, James A 255 Smith, James R 314 Smith, Jim 151, 156 Smith, Joe 59 Smith, John L 314 Smith, John T 148 Smith, Joyce 196, 314 Smith, Kenneth 179, 235, 314 Smith, Leo M 314, 340 Smith, Mary Jane 59, 188 Smith, Phyllis G 184 Smith, R. B.. 314 Smith, Richard 126, 339 Smith, Robert F 143, 148 Smith, Roger 314, 341 Snapp, Marjorie Lois 130, 187 Snepp, Donald 115 Snobarger, Richard D 147 Snyder, John W 125, 148 Snyder, Marvin 171 Snyder, Maurice 325, 330, 340 Sobieralski, Alexander 26 Sobrino, Maria 314 Somerville, John 175 Sonneveld, John 26, 129 Sorge, Marlowe B 26 Soshnick, Esther 101, 133 Sosin, Louis 100, 167 Soutar, James 259 South, Carolyn 314 Southern, Jean 345 Spahr, Doris 103, 314 Spongier, Robert K 109, 314 Spaulding, John 175 Spear, James 357 Specht, Marian 55, 180 Spell, Gladys 314 Spence, Donald 255 Spencer, Helen 184, 314 Spencer, John B 152, 314 Spencer, Mary Virginia 130 Spencer, Richard B 156 Spencer, Rose Jean 101, 184 Spencer, William 59, 63, 86, 179 Sperry, Fosey 180 Sphinx Club 91 Spiegal, June 203 Spilman, Claude 159, 314 SplittorfT, Paul 91, 109, 151, 314 Sponsel, John G 129 Spradling, Martha 130, 187 Springer, John C 140, 314 Springer, John E 86, 164, 314 Squire, Robert 126 Stafford, Laura 314 Stalter, Gaylord 314 Stancomb, Frieda May 345 Stands, Ben 176 Stapp, Leonore 133 Starkey, Paul E 352, 357 Starks, William 314, 336 Starr, Dick 144 Stayton, Chester A 338 Stearns, Martha 359 Stedman, Martha 79, 207, 314 Steele, Charles 143, 232, 314 Steele, Mary 79, 101 Steele, Mono 207 Steele, Richard M 97, 100, 256 Steele, Virginia Louise 184 Steele, Willard C 155 Steffy, Ralph M 125 Steinmetz, Doris 184 Stephens, Donald E 336 Stephenson, Thomas 99, 129 Stern, Joe 167 Sterrett, Don 179 Stevens, Betty L 133 Stevens, Doris 112 Stevens, James M 155 Stevens, Victoria 183 Stevens, Virginia 180, 314 Stewart, Judy 187 Stichnoth, Wayne 175 Stiefler, Louise 130, 203 Stiles, James L -- 148 Stimson, Mary Ellen 180 Stingle, Jane 180, 314 St. Meyer, Ora Glenn 314 Stock, Darrell 347, 348, 351, 357 Stoeckel, Wilma J 133 Stogdill, William J 155 Stoner, Morris 347, 348, 354 Stoner, Rachel 74, 101, 188 Stoops, Jean T 338 Story, James 160 Stoshitch, Ivan 94 Stout, Eldred W 348, 349, 357 Stover, Dorothy R 133 Stowe, Betty 191, 314 Strachan, Mary Edith 180 Stragand, George J 348, 357 Strain, Julia 76, 133 Straub, Jeanette 104, 314 Strauss, Joanne 195 Strawbridge, Robert 108, 151, 314 Streib, Frederick 330, 339 Strong, Charles L 314 Strong, Mrs. Martha 103 Stuart, Ed -80, 94, 100, 107 Stucky, Marjorie 191 Stull, Dick 172 Stull, Roger 42, 86, 108, 168 Stump, Eloise 191, 314, 92 Stump, Harold 117, 126, 314 397 Stump, Miss 104 Slurgis, Jack 26, 172 Sublette, Jim 55, 172 Suddoth, Johnny 168 Sullivan, Anne H 112 Sullivan, Marcella 337 Sullivan, Robert 168 Summerfield, Irving L 171 Summers, Merlin 179, 314 Surratt, Bernice 50 Sussman, Clyde 330 Sutton, Charles H 114, 314 Swaim, Robert 175 Swain, Maxine 81, 188 Swan, Phillip 179 Swan, Roberta 40, 200 Swango, Lois Marie 345 Swanson, Irvin 86, 91, 151, 244 Swayze, John A 168 Swets, Edward J 152, 314, 339 Swift, Jeanne 137 Swihart, Dale 172, 233 Swinford, Bill 59, 151 Switzer, Robert E 341 T Tackett, Dick 175 Taggart, Helen 196 Talbert, Pierre C 314, 341 Talbott, Frank 129 Tarkington House 125 Taubensee, Tom 159 Taulman, Maurice 50 Tavener, John 126, 235 Taylor, Doris Mae 130 Taylor, Ellen 76, 83, 183, 314 Taylor, Lyle 144 Taylor, Marilyn 137, 200 Taylor, Pauline 92, 180, 317 Taylor, Robert 117, 143, 314 Taylor, Ruth 74, 188, 218 Taylor, Verna Dell 41, 180, 210, 211 Teaney, Jeanne 187 Tedford, Jim 54, 97, 110, 140 Tedford, Marda Beth 358 Temerario, Tim 228 Tenell, Thomas 125 Tennell, Mary 183, 317 Terhune, Russell 179 Terpinas, Thomas 152 Terwillinger, Richard Hugh 97, 143 Teter, Mrs. Sanford 273 Theta Chi 179 Theta Sigma Phi 65 Thieme, James 164 Thieme, Helen 195, 317 Thorn, W. H 228, 248 Thomas, Elizabeth 191 Thomas, Hussey 129 Thomas, Peggy 184 Thomas, Virginia Ellen 195 Thompson, Alice E 200 Thompson, Candy 83, 180, 317 Thompson, Jean 187 Thompson, Madeline M 317 Thompson, Mary Margaret 200 Thompson, Marjorie 133 Thomson, Betty 317 Thornburg, F. Miller 317, 341 Thornhill, Harriett 207 Thornton, Richard 26, 144 Thrasher, Bette Jane 317 Tiernan, Martha Jean 184, 317 Timbrook, Henry Jr 259 Tindal, Rollie 147 Tindall, Robert Leslie 40, 164 Tinsley, Frank W 330 Tirmenstein, Marian 187 Tobian, Simon S 109, 317 Tolbert, Charles 164 Tomlinson, Ed 159 Tordella, Jo Anne 130 Torphy, John 26, 42, 168 Torphy, Margaret 112, 200, 317 Torphy, William .-. 24, 244, 317 Torrance, Jerry W 317 Torrens, Wally 172 Toth, Eleanor Jeanne 130 Touma, George 126 Tower, Margaret 101 Towns, Robert 126 Townsend, Bob 172 Townsend, Virginia Olive 130, 317 Truster, Harry 151, 248, 249 Tremper, Allen J 94, 317 Trennepohl, Donald L 125 Trimble, Jim 91, 147, 235, 317 Trixler, Pat 155 Trockman, Philip 171, 317 Trotter, Janice Catherine — 130 Trotter, Sherman B 317, 341 Troutt, Lute 358 Truman, Paul 125 Trutt, Mel 238 Tuchman, Joe 171, 317 Tuck, Betty 92, 188, 317 Tucker, Louise 133 Tucker, Merrill G 107, 317 Turgi, Robert 144 Turley, Max 129 Turman, Agnes E 184 Turner, Cola Annetta 317 Turner, Helen 180 Turner, Herbert 143 Turner, Jack 140, 317 Turner, Marion 187 Tuttle, Doris 196 Tyler, A. Lee 317 Tyner, Harlan H 330, 339 Tyner, Nellie Jane 130, 131, 317 u-v Uebelhoer, Urban Louis 68, 94, 107, 110, 317 Ulen, Clay 175 Ulrich, Stuart A ... 114 Unger, Melvin 97, 167 Updike, Arthur .80, 84, 99 Vail, John 175 Vale, Marjorie 200 Valentine, Lucille Clare 130, 199 Van Arsdel, Arthur E 317 Vanatta, John 125 Vanderveer, Elizabeth 317 Vanderveer, Margaret 317 Vandivier, Mary Louise 188 Van Dorn, Myron James 317, 338 Van Drew, Mary 40, 207, 317 Van Duren, Al 250 Van Fleit, William 97, 147 Van Matre, Nancy 207, 317 Van Meter, C. P 336 Vannatta, David 104 Van Natta, Lynn 59, 187 Van Vector, Helen D 330, 337 Varga, Anna M 317 Vargyas, Annabelle 118, 317 Vaughn, Marthada 199 Vaught, George Ford 29, 317 Veit, Joan 89, 92, 180, 220, 317 Varmilya, Robert W 340 Verplank, Dean 339 Vickery, Mrs. Millie Cox.. ..76, 89, 188, 317 Vidinghoff, Helen 134 Vie, John 156 Vigran, Marvin 171 Visher, John 73, 175, 317 Vittoz, Bob 255 Vogel, Bettye 317 Vogel, Ernie 168 Vogel, Ralph 84, 125 Vollrath, Richard 24, 109, 317 Vollrath, Victor J 330, 341 Volpert, James 99, 107, 125 Voripaieff, Richard 26, 126 Voss, Tom 159 Vracin, Riley 196 Vurpillat, Joseph B., Jr 148 w W. A. A 79 Wade, Charles 59, 63, 129, 320 Wade, Richard 255 Waggoner, Wm. Richard 159, 320 Wagner, Paul H 58 Wagner, Sheldon R 171 Wahl, Kermit 143, 255 Wahlert, Eldora 358 Wakeland, J. Peter 160 Waldo, Robert E 108, 151, 320 Walk, Charles Edward 320 Walk, Nolo B 133 Walker, Carl 168 Walker, Charles 175 Walker, Donald Leo 320 Walker, Emily 320 Walker, Marilyn 187 Walker, Sally 55, 192 Walkowiak, Dick 82, 163 Wall, Dorothy 188 Wall, Frances 134, 191 Wallace, Phyllis 134 Walstrum, Don 125 Walter, George J 156 Walter, Ruth Mae 191 Walter, William 125 Walters, J. Jewel 112, 320 Walters, Nellie Caroline 320 Walther, Miriam Elaine.. ..71 , 101, 104, 133 Waltz, Ralph 109 Wampler, Lloyd C 318 Wandrey, Elfriede S 318 Ward, Irl 151 Waring, Bettye Jeanne 199 Warnugut, Dovid 147 Wasserman, Goldie Jean 130, 203 Wesson, Charlotte 184 Waters, Richard J 164 Wathen, Richard 117 Watkins, Marvin 255 Watson, Joanne 200 Watt, Patty 195 Watts, Rita 187 398 Wayne, William 26, 99, Wearly, Jeane Weber, Douglas M Weber, Robert R 318, Webster, John R 129, Weddell, Mary Agnes Weekly, Frances I Wehmeier, Shirley Weikart, Maurice A 117, 163, Weil, Jean Weinbaum, Irving R Weinland, Mary 79, 89, Weinstein, Norman William 46, 109, Weinstein, Sherman Weismann, Arthur Weisner, Jo Ann Weiss, Robert 97, Welborn, Marian 204, Wellman, Guy 140, Wells, Barbara 42, 55, Wells, Charles R 24, Wells, Henry H Wells, Herman B 272, Wells, John Wells, Miss Welp, Dennis 348, 351, Welsch, Imelda 187, Welsh, Margaret 83, 200, Welter, Ardell Wendeln, Bob 114, Wenger, Betty Lu 42, 54, Werking, Jane Wesselman, Charles A 102, 129, Wesselman, Harry 94, 122, 129, Westfall, George S Westfall, John B 324, 330, Weyl, Mr. ... Wharton Wheeler, Wheeler, Wheeler, Whipple Whisler, Whisman, James ... Whitaker, Bill Whitaker, Mary Helen Whitcomb, Roger F 330, White, Bob 82, 91, 147, 233, 236, White, Donald D 26, White, Eugene G 91, 120, 168, 228, 233, White, James C. .99, 100, 122, 126, White, John D 100, White, J. Howard White, Leonard Franklin 26, White, Leo H 347, 348, 351, White, Martha White, Norman White, Robert E 172, White, Zama 83, Whiteman, Rex K Whitesell, Shirley Whiteside, James Whitfield, John S„ Jr 151, Whitinger, John L Whitman, June Whitlock, Francis C Whittenbraker, Richard W 102, 172, 244, Wible, John Wible, Mary Lee , Donald C 311 Edith , Mary Ann Robert , Nancy Robert 115 Widaman, John D 117, 318 184 Widman, Warren R 26, 99, 125 160 Wiecking, Fred A 172 360 Wiethoff, Cliff 144, 318, 336 341 Wiggins, Margaret L 133 318 Wilcox, Howdy 57, 63, 91, 143, 319 133 Wilcox, Phyllis 180 192 Wilderman, Betty 319 318 Wildermuth, Ora L 273 200 Wiler, Joe 129 125 Wiley, James Franklin 143 318 Wilhelmus, Gilbert M 148, 319 167 Wilk, Rosalyn 319 171 Wilkerson, Joe 129 176 Wilkinson, Jim 249 137 Wilkins, W. G 143 167 Willcutts, Helen Jean 345 318 Willeford, George 50 255 Williams, Charles D 330, 339 200 Williams, Daisy Dolores 345 318 Williams, Edward G 108, 109, 159, 319 151 Williams, Ella M 133 274 Williams, Gene 108, 155 159 Williams, Gordon R 97, 176 104 Williams, Marian 204 355 Williams, Mr 104 318 Williams, Ross 125 318 Williams, Ward 140 191 Williamson, John 175 318 Williamson, Letitia 192 192 Willis, Hugh E 259 187 Wills, Virginia 192 318 Wilson, Ben 164, 319, 336 318 Wilson, Charles A. 94, 122, 125 318 Wilson, Dama 319 336 Wilson, Georgia H 200 104 Wilson, John 151, 164, 172 340 Wilson, Keith 140 318 Wilson, Robert J 168, 319 191 Wilson, Thomas D 175 107 Wilson, William F 164 180 Wilt, Frederick 147, 225, 238 110 Windle, Dick 159 155 Wingert, Patty Lou 195 125 Winner, Bernard Mark 319 130 Winslow, Robert L., Jr 29, 94, 319 339 Winters, Jane E 192, 319 255 Winters, Joan 319 156 W interinger, Tom 168 Wise, Al 244, 255 318 Wise, Miriam 180 129 Wiseman, Marianne 188 107 Wiseman, Mary 46, 134 . 53 Wiseheart, Rex 164, 319 318 Wisenbaugh, Paul E 319 355 Witham, Robert L... 143, 319, 336 207 Withers, Anne 359 176 Witherspoon, Ruth 204 356 Woelky, Jane 130 204 Wohlfeld, Julius B 330 338 Wohlford, Ned 151 318 Wolf, Fred R 143, 350 129 Wolf, George 319 318 Wolf, Jane 134 318 Wolfe, Freda 319 318 Wolfe, Mr 104 330 Wolfe, Rosalind 133 Wolford, Ted 25 360 Woliung, Ruth 110, 112 255 Wollet, Don 117 184 Wollet, Dorothy Louise 319 Wood, James B. 86, 109, 168, 319 Wood, Jean 137 Wood, Richard 168 Wood, Wilbur F 319 Woodburn, Dave 159 Woods, Lee Roy 338 Woodward, Mark 144 Wooldridge, Buck 29, 50, 147 Woolery, Jim 172 Woolery, Richard 325, 330, 336 Woolford, Robert A 148 Woolling, Kenneth 399 Worden, Maryanne 130 Worland, Millie Jane 195 Worley, J. P 330, 336 Worley, Richard 164 Worster, Paul T 319 Woytovich, Helen 130, 319 Wray, Frank J 80 Wright, Donald H 129 Wright, Jack 59, 63, 159, 319 Wright, Virginia 137 Wright, William 110, 151, 319 Wulfman, Betty 101, 195 Wunker, Swift 140, 244 Wurtz, Robert W 348 X-Y-Z Xanders, Thomas 125 Yakey, Wally 143 Yanchosek, John Francis 320 Yarling, Richard 156 Yeager, Fritzie 187 Yeager, Lawrence 143 Y. M. C. A.... 80 Yochem, Gus 140 Yoder, Eugene 352 Yoder, Frank E 320 Yoder, James 125 Yoffe, Lillie Jean 203 Yonclas, Nick 125 York, Charles 126 Younce, James 125 Young, James 339 Young, Jane 191 Young, Marilyn 192 Young, Mary 320 Young, Mildred 358 Young, Robert Arthur 164, 175 Young, Ruth Joan 320 Young, Wini 59, 204 Y. W. C. A 76 Zajicek, Otto 320 Zankl, Emily 112, 180 Zaring, Barbara G 133 Zeigler, Sanford 171 Zeller, Frank 140 Zeller, John H 164, 320 Zeta Tau Alpha 206 Zielinski, William Frank 320 Zimmer, Andrew M 24, 86, 172, 254, 320 Zimmerman, Virginia E 320 Zimny, Bob 232 Zink, Darell E 147, 320 Zink, Robert 339 Zivich, Thomas 109, 320 Zoeller, Frank U 320 Zubras, Vincent - 225 Zuhl, Walt 176 Zuzga, Joe 126 Zweig, Warren E 320 399 ,JL. And so, for you — the students — we k have planned this book, all the while won- dering just how you would really like to remember your college life of 1942. Before the happenings of this year have had the opportunity to become memories, we have presented to you our inter- pretation of what you have done and of what others have done which will affect you. Hoping to reflect the spirit of America today, we have adopted a red, white, and blue color scheme; and hoping to depict informally Indiana Univer- sity ' s willingness to do its part cheerfully, we have given a light twist to the seriousness of campus life. We hope that we have succeeded in making this book one which will help you keep alive your feelings and experiences of the year 1942.
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